Article of the Month -
September 2018
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FAO support to land consolidation in Europe and Central Asia from
2000-2018
- Experiences and way forward
Morten HARTVIGSEN, FAO
Morten Hartvigsen
This paper was presented at the FIG Congress 2018 in
Istanbul, Turkey in the joint FIG / FAO session:
Best
Practice for Land Consolidation Legislation in Line with VGGT.
The paper gives an overview of the FAO land consolidation
programme from 2000 and onwards including lessons learned and way
forward. The objective of this paper is to present the FAO experiences
of supporting member countries related to land consolidation.
This article in .pdf-format
(22 pages)
SUMMARY
Key words: Crustal Deformation,
Peninsular Malaysia, Non-linear, Dynamic Reference Frame
Shortly after The Food and Agriculture Organization of the
United Nations (FAO) was founded in 1945, the organization had
started to support member countries addressing structural
problems with land fragmentation and small farm sizes through
development of land consolidation instruments.
In the late 1990s, land fragmentation and land consolidation
re-appeared on the agenda, this time in the context of Central
and Eastern Europe where land reforms from the beginning of
transition in 1990 had led to excessive land fragmentation and
small farm sizes in most of the countries. FAO began around 2000
to document and address problems in this area. The objective of
this paper is to present the FAO experiences of supporting
member countries related to land consolidation, but also to
reflect on the lessons learned and the way forward.
Supporting smallholders and family farms is one of four
priorities for FAO in Europe and Central Asia, confirmed by the
FAO Regional Conference in 2016. FAO established in the region
in 2014 the Regional Initiative on Empowering Smallholders and
Family Farms for Improved Rural Livelihood and Poverty
Reduction. The regional land consolidation programme is part of
the Regional Initiative.
Most governments throughout Central and Eastern Europe have from
the early 1990s and onwards recognized the need to address these
structural problems hampering development of agriculture and
rural development. This has led to the introduction of land
consolidation instruments. FAO has played a leading role in
supporting introduction of land consolidation and in the
development of national land consolidation programmes. The FAO
regional land consolidation programme has three main pillars: i)
technical guidelines, ii) field projects in the programme
countries and iii) the informal network of land tenure
professionals interested in land consolidation, land banking,
land market development etc. (LANDNET). FAO has so far
implemented field projects in 10 countries in the region.
Since the Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance
of Tenure of Land, Fisheries and Forests in the Context of
National Food Security were adopted in May 2012, the Guidelines
have served as a reference to improve governance of tenure,
including through land consolidation, based on international
best practice.
The experiences from many countries in the region show that it
is often a long and not always straightforward process to
develop a fully operational national land consolidation
programme and also more complex than anticipated 10-15 years
ago. There is in general a need to mainstream and accelerate the
development in many countries and also to ensure an integrated
broader support from civil society organizations such as farmers
organizations and academia.
1. Introduction
Shortly after The Food and Agriculture Organization of the
United Nations (FAO) was founded in 1945, the organization had
started to support member countries addressing structural
problems in agriculture with land fragmentation and small
holding and farm sizes through development of land consolidation
instruments(1. During the 1950s and 60s, FAO supported through
technical assistance development of land consolidation in member
countries in Europe such as Turkey, Greece, Spain and Cyprus but
also in countries in the Near East and Asia(2. Seminars with
experts from the member countries were organized through the
established Working Party on Consolidation of Holdings. In 1955,
looking back at the first decade of activities of the
organization, FAO concluded that “Excessive fragmentation or
uneconomically small holdings may prevent the farmer from using
his time to best advantage or adopting modern means of
production, e.g. mechanization”(3. During the second half of the
1950s, a study was conducted on best practise on land
consolidation in Europe.(4
In the late 1990s, land fragmentation and land consolidation
re-appeared on the agenda, this time in the context of Central
and Eastern Europe where land reforms from the beginning of
transition in 1990 had led to excessive land fragmentation and
small farm sizes in most of the countries.
FAO began to document and address problems in this area.(5 The
Munich Symposium in 2002 was a milestone in the process and the
first of so far 18 regional workshops held to date on land
consolidation, land banking, land market development and related
topics.(6 FAO has in Europe and Central Asia since 2002 supported
member countries in preparing for national land consolidation
programmes through i) preparation of technical guidelines and
publications, ii) field projects and iii) by organizing the
mentioned series of regional workshop and establishment of an
informal network of land tenure professionals. Since 2010, the
network is known as LANDNET.
The objective of this paper is to present the FAO experiences
of supporting member countries related to land consolidation
from 2002 and onwards, but also to reflect on the lessons
learned and the way forward. The endorsement in 2012 of the
Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure of
Land, Fisheries and Forests (VGGT)(7, and in 2015 the adoption of
the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development with 17 Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs) and 169 associated targets, further
require reflection to ensure that all development initiatives
related to land tenure and beyond in the best possible way is in
line with VGGT and contribute to achieving the SDGs.
2. Land fragmentation and small farms
In Europe and Central Asia, FAO is among its 53 member
countries providing technical support in 18 programme countries.
Most of these 18 countries have farm structures dominated by
smallholders and family farms or dualistic farm structures with
many small farms and few large corporate farms.(8
Land reforms were at the beginning of the transition from
centrally planned economy to market economy in 1990 high on the
political agenda in most countries in Central and Eastern Europe
(CEE) and together with restructuring of the large-scale
socialist farms a key part of the overall agrarian reforms.(9
Different land reform approaches were applied in the different
countries in the region with the main methods being the
restitution of ownership to former owners and the distribution
of agricultural land to the rural population in either physical
parcels or land shares.(10 Also the outcome of land reform varied
between the countries. There is a strong correlation between the
land reform approach and the farm structures today.(11 In most CEE
countries, land reforms have completely changed the farm
structures that existed during the socialist era. As a result of
the recent land reforms, the ownership of agricultural land has
become fragmented to a medium or high extent in almost all the
countries. Also the land use has become fragmented in most CEE
countries. The seven countries in ex-Yugoslavia suffer from
excessive fragmentation of both land ownership and of land use.
In Yugoslavia, however, the collectivization process was never
completed and around 80 percent of agricultural land remained in
both private ownership and use during the socialist era. Thus,
land fragmentation in these countries is not an outcome of
recent land reforms but rather a result of the pre-WWII farm
structures that were largely “frozen” between 1950 and 1990
combined with continued fragmentation through inheritance.
In countries such as Albania, Moldova, the ex-Yugoslavia
countries and the three Trans Caucasus countries, the average
sizes of arable agricultural parcels are around 0.3 ha and most
farms have a size of 1-3 ha.(12 In Albania, 98 percent of all farms
are less than 5 ha and the average farm size is 2.1 ha
distributed into 2-5 land parcels.(13 In Georgia, 99 percent of all
farms are smaller than 5 ha, and the average farm size is 1.4 ha
distributed into 4-5 parcels. In FYR Macedonia, 95 percent of
all farms are smaller than 5 ha, and the average farm size is
1.6 ha distributed into in average 7 parcels.
In Central Asia, land reforms followed in most countries a
different path than in the rest of the region. Only in
Kyrgyzstan, the land was privatized and ownership rights
distributed to the rural population and only the arable land (7
percent of the total land area in the country) was privatized.(14
In the other Central Asian countries, land remains owned by the
state but land use rights were allocated to the rural population
during the land reform process. In Kyrgyzstan, the average farm
size is 2.9 ha. In Tajikistan, it is 3.7 ha.(15 In general, the
level land fragmentation in the five countries in Central Asia
is low as the land is usually distributed in only 1-2 parcels
per farm.
The level of fragmentation of both land ownership and land
use in the 18 FAO programme countries in Europe and Central Asia
is assessed in Figure 1.
Land fragmentation and small farm sizes is a fundamental
structural problem resulting in low productivity and
competitiveness in the globalized economy. Di Falco et al.
(2010)(16 list a number of publications that confirm that land
fragmentation increases production costs and leads to
inefficiency. The structural problem with excessive land
fragmentation and small farm sizes is hampering agriculture and
rural development and hence also most initiatives in support of
development. Small-scale agriculture production is ongoing in
subsistence and semi-subsistence farms where most of the
production is consumed in the household and the farms have weak
access to markets and food value chains.
Land fragmentation and small farm sizes is also among the
root causes to out migration from rural areas and in several
countries in the region a main reason for arable land being
abandoned. In Armenia, according to the 2014 Agricultural
Census, 33 percent of the land of family farms and 38 percent of
the land of corporate farms is abandoned.(17 Land abandonment is
widespread in most Western Balkan countries. In FYR Macedonia,
around 1/3 of the arable land is unutilized.
Supporting smallholders and family farms is one of four
priorities for FAO in Europe and Central Asia, confirmed by the
FAO Regional Conference in 2016. FAO established in the region
in 2014 the Regional Initiative on Empowering Smallholders and
Family Farms for Improved Rural Livelihood and Poverty
Reduction. The Regional Initiative is building on the legacy of
the International Year of Family Farming in 2014. The Regional
Initiative has two main components; i) to support policy
development and innovative practices for increased sustainable
agricultural production and ii) to support improvement of rural
livelihood and enhanced access to natural resources.(18 FAO support
to address land fragmentation and small farm sizes is included
under the programmatic umbrella of the Regional Initiative.
Country |
Level of fragmentation of
ownership in agricultural land |
Level of fragmentation of land
use in agricultural land |
Albania |
High |
High |
Armenia |
High |
High |
Azerbaijan |
High |
High |
Belarus |
Low |
Low |
Bosnia-Herzegovina |
High |
High |
FYR Macedonia |
High |
High |
Georgia |
High |
High |
Kazakhstan |
Low |
Low |
Kosovo* |
High |
High |
Kyrgyzstan |
Low |
Low |
Moldova |
High |
Medium-high |
Montenegro |
High |
High |
Serbia |
High |
High |
Tajikistan |
Low |
Low |
Turkey |
High |
High |
Turkmenistan |
Low |
Low |
Ukraine |
Low-medium |
Low |
Uzbekistan |
Low |
Low |
Figure 1: Level of land fragmentation in FAO REU programme
countries.
* References to Kosovo shall be understood to be in the context
of UN Security Council
Resolution 1244 (1999).
Following the land reforms, land administration systems
including cadaster agencies and land registers were with
large-scale donor support build up in the countries. Land rights
were formally registered after land reform and land markets were
prepared, including for agricultural land. From the mid-1990s
and onwards, the World Bank has funded 42 land projects in 24
ECA countries in support of the land and property sector.(19 In
most of the FAO programme countries in the region, the first
registration of formal land ownership is almost completed. In
Georgia, however, only around 1/3 of all land parcels are
formally registered.
Despite the many efforts from both governments and donors
throughout the region, agricultural land market remain weak in
many countries. Many different types of constraints hamper land
markets, especially the agricultural land markets. Many
countries have “pockets” of unregistered land, often state or
other public owned land but also areas of private land remain
unregistered. In the countries in ex-Yugoslavia, the formal land
market was very much restricted and land registration was
largely neglected during the decades of collectivization. The
situation has not changed a lot since the collapse of Yugoslavia
and a large percentage of the formally registered owners have
been deceased for decades and inheritance remains unsolved in
the families. All these registration problems prevent the land
parcels from accessing the formal land market.
Another type of problems hampering the development of the formal
agricultural land markets have to do with the established land
market procedures, i.e. the procedures for transfer of ownership
and use rights from one registered owner to another. Land
transaction procedures are in many countries complicated and
costly compared with the local land market price. This often
leads to a high degree of informal land transactions where the
transfer of ownership is agreed between the seller and the buyer
but never formally registered in the land register. Experiences
from FAO land consolidation pilot projects in Albania and
Azerbaijan show that most of the agricultural land parcels sold
in the pilot communities since the land distribution in the
1990s have not been formally registered. This undermines the
sustainability of the formal land administration systems(20 and the
high degree of informality in the land market is then again
leading to insecure land rights and risk of disputes and
conflicts that are very difficult to solve in the Court system
after decades of informality.
3. FAO experiences from support to land consolidation in the
region
Almost 30 years have passed since the fall of the Berlin Wall in
1989 initiated the transition in the former Eastern Bloc from
centrally planned economy towards market economy. As discussed
in Section 2, the outcome of land reforms and land privatization
in many countries in Europe and Central Asia have been excessive
land fragmentation and small farm sizes. Governments throughout
the region have mostly recognized the need to address these
structural problems hampering development of agriculture and
rural development. This has led to the introduction of land
management instruments such as land consolidation and land
banking.
The current status of the introduction of land consolidation in
Central and Eastern Europe is illustrated in Figure 2. Five
minimum criteria are to be in place before a national programme
is established and operational: i) land consolidation, as a land
management instrument, is embedded in the overall land policy of
the country, ii) a legal framework for land consolidation has
been adopted, iii) a public lead agency for land consolidation
has been established and delegated the task to manage the
national land consolidation programme, iv) secured funding on an
annual basis allows the lead agency to plan activities years
ahead and v) technical and administrative capacity has been
developed to implement land consolidation projects in the field
and to manage the programme.(21 Eight CEE countries already have
ongoing land consolidation programmes when the five criteria are
applied.
The introduction of land consolidation in CEE from the early
1990s and onwards has been supported by more than 50
international technical assistance projects funded by
international organizations and donors.(22 Certainly not all have
been of large scale, e.g. with field activities in the form of
small pilots, and some have been relatively small studies.
However, it is clear that only few countries would have been
where they are today without international technical assistance.
In this context, it can be observed that countries have, in a
certain period, an “open window” to attract donor funding for
land consolidation, as well as other projects, before they
become members of the EU. After EU accession, it is often
difficult for the countries to fund such development activities
as international organizations and donors usually close down
support latest at the time of EU accession. For various reasons,
countries such as Latvia, Estonia, Croatia and Romania were not
able to make land consolidation programmes operational before
membership of the EU and they are now facing difficulties in
finding international support for land consolidation.
Figure 2: Status for the development of land consolidation
programmes in Central and Eastern Europe (as of May 2018).
FAO has in Central and Eastern Europe from 2000 and onwards
played a leading role in supporting introduction of land
consolidation and in the development of national land
consolidation programmes. As the beginning of what has become
the FAO regional programme on land consolidation, the
organization commissioned in 2000-2001 studies on land
fragmentation and land consolidation in six countries; Bulgaria,
the Czech Republic, Hungary, Romania, Georgia and Armenia.(23 The
studies documented the need to address the structural problems
and also the interest among farmers and other stakeholders. The
results of the studies were presented at the first regional
workshop on land consolidation in Munich in February 2002. As an
outcome of the meeting, the participants agreed on The Munich
Statement on land consolidation as a tool for rural development
in CEE / CIS countries. The statement expressed the concern of
the participants in terms of the negative impact of land
fragmentation in transition countries and recommended to
decision-makers in these countries and to international
organizations and donors to include in their development
programmes land consolidation as an essential instrument for
rural development.
The FAO regional land consolidation programme has three main
pillars: i) technical guidelines, ii) field projects in the
programme countries and iii) the informal network of land tenure
professionals interested in land consolidation, land banking,
land market development etc. (LANDNET). During the 2000s, FAO
prepared and published three technical publications to give
guidance for land consolidation activities in Central and
Eastern Europe.(24 Focus was on the initial introduction of land
consolidation in the countries and on funding opportunities
under Rural Development Programmes with EU co-financing.
FAO has from the first field project, started in Armenia in
2004, and onwards so far supported 10 programme countries in
Central and Eastern Europe related to land consolidation. The
starting point for the technical support is usually the
recognition in the country of the need to address land
fragmentation and small farm sizes and a vision to develop an
operational national land consolidation programme. In countries
such as Armenia (2004-06), Serbia (2006-08), Albania (2010-13),
Bosnia and Herzegovina (2011-15) and Azerbaijan (2016-19), FAO
has provided the initial support to introduce land consolidation
in the country.(25 The projects in the mentioned countries have
usually had three main components: i) drafting of a national
land consolidation strategy, ii) land consolidation pilot
project and iii) training and capacity development. In other
countries, FAO has provided support after others have
contributed with the initial support to introduce land
consolidation. In Lithuania (2005-07) and Moldova (2010-11), FAO
supported the preparation of national land consolidation
strategies after pilots had already been implemented with
support from other donors and international organizations. In
Kosovo (2016-17), FAO supported the further development of the
land consolidation methodology already in place as part of the
preparation of a national programme. In Ukraine, there is
currently a Moratorium on sale of agricultural land. The
government is planning to open the agricultural land market and
FAO is during 2017-18 supporting the development of land
consolidation legislation planned for adoption when the
agricultural land market is opened.(26 In the former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia, FAO supported during 2014-17 the
preparation of the national land consolidation programme by
implementing two pilots to test the Law on consolidation of
agricultural land adopted in 2013 before scaling up and provided
in addition training and capacity building. From 2017 and until
2020, FAO is through the EU funded project Mainstreaming of the
National Land Consolidation Programme (MAINLAND) supporting the
first round of land consolidation projects under the national
programme (See Box 1 below) (27 (28.
BOX 1 – FAO support to the land consolidation
programme in FYR Macedonia 2014-2020
The farm structure in FYR Macedonia is dominated by
small family farms with an average farm size of 1.6 ha
and an average of seven land parcels per agricultural
holding. Excessive fragmentation of both landownership
and land use exists, not so much as a result of the land
reform process but related to the farm structure of
prior to WWII, which still exists to a large degree. The
average farm size has decreased since the independence
in 1991 and as much as one-third of the total arable
land is abandoned.
Land consolidation was introduced with technical
assistance from the Netherlands during 2008-2012 where
two rounds of small-scale pilots were implemented and
the National strategy on agricultural land consolidation
in the Republic of Macedonia for the period 2012-2020
was developed. The strategy was politically adopted in
March 2013. The Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and
Water Economy (MAFWE) prepared the Law on Consolidation
of Agricultural Land during 2012-2013, and the law was
adopted by the Parliament in December 2013. Five by-laws
were prepared during the first half of 2014. According
to the land consolidation strategy and the law, the main
objective of implementing land consolidation is to
reduce land fragmentation, improve parcel shapes and
increase the size of agricultural holdings and hence
contribute to increased productivity and competitiveness
in the agricultural sector. In addition, the objective
is to reduce the amount of abandoned agricultural land,
improve rural infrastructure and improve environmental
protection and sustainable management of natural
resources. The law opened for implementation of land
consolidation in two different approaches,
majority-based where the qualified majority of the
landowners in the project area approve the re-allotment
plan and a voluntary approach where all included land
transactions are agreed by the owners. In 2013, MAFWE
established a Land Consolidation Department with
responsibility for the preparation and operation of a
national land consolidation programme.
The Government requested FAO to support the
preparation of the national land consolidation
programme. The project began in December 2014 and was
finalized in March 2017. The newly adopted legislation
was tested in two land consolidation pilots, one with a
majority-based approach and one in a voluntary approach.
The pilots revealed several obstacles and bottlenecks in
the legislation, a detailed legal assessment was carried
out including for compliance with the Voluntary
Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure
(VGGT) and an extensive package of legal recommendations
were provided to the Ministry. Both pilots were
successful in terms of the re-allotment plans. In the
majority-based pilot in Egri, the number of parcels will
go down from 876 to 232 (around a factor 4). New land
parcels will have more rational shapes and they are
better accessible. Rehabilitation of agricultural
infrastructure, new roads, irrigation and drainage is
planned. In Konce, a draft re-allotment plan was
prepared in a voluntary approach including many small
scattered parcels of state land. However, due to the
legal constraints, the full implementation of the pilots
in the field has waited for the legal obstacles to be
solved through the adoption of amendments to the
legislation.
FAO is from March 2017 until September 2020
implementing the EU funded project Mainstreaming of the
National Land Consolidation Programme (MAINLAND)
supporting the first round of land consolidation
projects under the national programme. The project has
during 2017/18 extensively supported the Ministry in the
preparation of the necessary legal amendments and
prepared for the launch of the first 12 field projects
in mid-2018.
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Since the Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance
of Tenure of Land, Fisheries and Forests in the Context of
National Food Security(29 were adopted in May 2012, the Guidelines
have served as the a reference to improve governance of tenure
based on international best practice. The Guidelines promote
security and formal registration of legitimate tenure right as
well and the enjoyment of the rights. The document has a
specific section on land consolidation and other readjustment
approaches (Section 4.13) where it is a guiding principle that
it should be ensured that the participants are at least as well
off after the land consolidation as before.
It is the approach of FAO to introduce land consolidation
instruments in support of the development of the normal land
markets. As discussed in Section 2, agricultural land markets in
the 18 FAO programme countries are often not functioning well.
Addressing and solving the land registrations problems needs to
be an integrated part of the land consolidation process and
usually it is recommended to empower the decision making bodies
approving the land consolidation project / re-allotment plan
also to take decisions on land registration issues related to
the landowners and land parcels participating in the land
consolidation projects. Without the mandate to adjudicate
uncertainties in ownership, it would often not be possible to
implement and register the re-allotment plans with the new
parcel layout after the land consolidation projects.
Implementation of land consolidation can support the development
of weak agricultural land markets. Small land parcels have often
a market price that is lower than the transaction costs involved
in transferring them from one owner to another and there will
often be no interest in purchasing such parcels. After
consolidation, the market will begin to function and gradually
become stronger as the process of improving the farm structures
continues through normal land market transactions.
Figure 3: Majority-based land consolidation pilot project in
Egri village in FYR Macedonia (2017). Parcel structure before
(left) and after (right). The number of land parcels was reduced
by a factor 4. Integrated rehabilitation of agricultural
infrastructure (roads, irrigation and drainage).
Throughout Europe, land consolidation is implemented in two
main approaches, majority-based land consolidation, often
referred to as compulsory or comprehensive land consolidation,
and voluntary land consolidation.(30 In a majority-based approach,
a qualified majority of the landowners in the project area
representing the majority of the land in the project area can
decide about the implementation of the re-allotment plan. In
this way also landowners not supporting the plan will still have
their land parcels consolidated but will always receive land of
at least the same value as before the project. FAO has in the
region promoted to introduce land consolidation in a voluntary
approach. However, a majority-based land consolidation approach
can as part of a national programme in some cases be the best
solution when legal safeguards are in place properly protecting
legitimate tenure rights, e.g. if the project is supported by
almost all the landowners and also the value of the
participating land parcels is homogenous. FAO has in addition
promoted a third approach - integrated voluntary land
consolidation(31 – where among other elements the voluntary
approach is combined with the needed improvement of the local
agricultural infrastructure in the project area.
Figure 4: Voluntary land consolidation pilot project in
Moldova (2008). Land ownership in part of Ghiduleni village
before (left) and after (right) the project (small part of the
project area).
As discussed in Section 2, rural communities in the FAO
programme countries are usually suffering from a wide range of
needs and constraints including the structural problems of land
fragmentation and small farm sizes. Hence, there is a strong
need to integrate the land consolidation work with broader
support to local community development beginning with the
rehabilitation of agricultural infrastructure but going well
beyond. In FAO land consolidation pilots in countries such as
Armenia, Serbia, Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina and FYR
Macedonia, local Community Development Plans have been prepared
in an inclusive and participatory process with the local
stakeholders.(32 In 2004, FAO published A short introduction to
micro-regional planning, which supports community-led
development initiatives, also in connection with land
consolidation projects.(33 Conducting a series of community
workshops will often be a good way to facilitate the process.
This should be coordinated with the awareness and information
meetings conducted as part of the land consolidation process
where also the participation of the stakeholders is essential.
Also the active involvement of the individual stakeholders,
including the landowners and farmers, is important. In the FAO
pilots, the aim has been to individually interview all
identified landowners about their interest in and wish for the
land consolidation project. These interviews are in addition an
opportunity to discuss with the individual landowners their
perception of needs for development at a very practical level,
e.g. where parcels need access roads, need for renewal or new
irrigation systems, need for drainage etc. The adoption in 2015
of the Agenda 2030 and the Sustainable Development Goals with 17
goals and 169 associated targets requires a more programmatic
and integrated approach and a need to re-think development work
in general.(34 This also applies to the technical support to land
consolidation.
FAO experiences from the region show that land consolidation
projects are often hampered by low land mobility as many want to
consolidate but relatively few landowners are interested in
selling land parcels and few can afford to purchase additional
land.(35 The re-allotment planning, in particular in a voluntary
land consolidation approach, becomes very difficult if no such
land pool is available to catalyze the process. Hence, it
becomes important to find ways to increase the land mobility. In
many countries in Western Europe, state land banks or land funds
are established to support the land consolidation instruments in
this respect. The land bank purchases, often on normal land
market conditions, land from private owners willing to sell in a
short period before a land consolidation project is launched.
This land pool is then used to catalyze the re-allotment
planning, and the land is sold again by the land bank in the
land consolidation process and the revenue goes back into the
land bank and can be used to catalyze the next project. Many
countries in Central and Eastern Europe have large reserves of
state owned agricultural land after the finalization of land
reforms. In Lithuania, 400,000 ha remains in state ownership and
in FYR Macedonia, 240,000 ha of agricultural land remains in
state ownership.(36 The possible synergies between land
consolidation and land banking instruments in a Central and
Eastern European context have been discussed at several regional
land consolidation conferences and workshops during the last
decade. However, the situation is that land banking in
connection with land consolidation projects has so far largely
failed and the potential remains unused.(37 There are a number of
reasons for this and some of them are country specific. However,
a general explanation appears to be related to the organization
of state land management and land consolidation in the
countries. Often different public institutions are responsible
for the land consolidation programmes and the management of the
state land fund and efforts are often not coordinated.
4. The way forward
In 1973, when Hans Meliczek was looking back at the work on land
consolidation of FAO during 1945-1973, he emphasized the
importance of i) implementing pilots before scaling up to a full
programme, ii) adopting proper legislative provisions, iii)
establishing land funds to support the land consolidation
process and iv) integrating land consolidation with improvement
of agricultural infrastructure and other measures for local
rural development.(38 As discussed in Section 3, these
recommendations are all still valid when supporting the
countries in the ECA region in building up operational national
land consolidation programmes.
The experiences from many countries in the region show that it
is often a long and not always straightforward process to
develop a fully operational national land consolidation
programme and also more complex than anticipated 10-15 years ago
when the FAO regional land consolidation programme was launched.
The political support can easily be lost in the process as
governments and key persons in ministries and other public
institutions are replaced. However, the political support and
the drive for finalizing can also come back after years of
little progress. In Albania, a national land consolidation
strategy was drafted with support from a FAO project during
2012-13, while the strategy was only adopted in 2016. Developing
and adopting national land consolidation strategies has proven
to be a very successful tool to embed the land consolidation
instrument in national policy and to secure political consensus
that goes beyond the life of the current government. Countries
such as Lithuania, Albania and FYR Macedonia are good examples
on this.
Figure 5: The optimal process from introduction of land
consolidation to an operational programme.
Even with strong political support, the experiences show that
preparing for an operational national land consolidation
programme takes time and needs to go through different stages
from the first pilot implemented without specific land
consolidation legislation to developing and adopting a land
consolidation strategy and subsequently the legal framework.
Then testing the legal framework in a second round of pilots and
fine-tuning procedures and legislation based on pilot
experiences. Extensive international technical assistance
throughout the process will often be needed. Figure 5
illustrates the optimal process from introduction of land
consolidation to an operational programme.
There is in general a need to mainstream and accelerate
development of operational land consolidation programmes in many
countries and also to ensure an integrated broader support from
civil society organizations such as farmers organizations and
academia.(39 There is also a need for enhanced regional cooperation
and exchange of experiences between countries. With the
establishment of LANDNET, the informal network of land tenure
professionals working in the field of land consolidation and
land market development and the unique series of so far 18
regional workshops since 2002 (see Section 1), there is already
established a very strong platform for further scaling up the
regional cooperation. It is also essential for FAO to further
strengthen partnerships related to land consolidation beyond the
valuable partnerships already established through LANDNET and
with UNECE Working Party on Land Administration (WPLA).
Development and adoption of solid and operational land
consolidation legislation is in all countries a corner stone in
the process towards a national programme. However, it has proven
to be very difficult to adopt fully operational legislation in
the first attempt and several countries have made major
amendments to the legislation after the first projects under the
national programmes. In Lithuania, the first land consolidation
legislation was adopted in 2004 and amended in 2010 after the
first wave of projects implemented 2005-2008.(40 In FYR Macedonia
(see Box 1), the Law on consolidation of agricultural land was
adopted in 2013, tested in pilots during 2014-17 and amended in
2018 based on pilot experiences. Most of the legal discussions
are with few variations the same in all the countries preparing
for a national land consolidation programme. In order to enhance
the support to the programme countries, FAO decided in 2017 to
conduct a regional legal study on land consolidation legislation
involving around 10 European countries with ongoing land
consolidation programmes. The study is conducted in 2018 and is
expected to identify regional best practise and provide generic
guidance on the drafting of land consolidation laws to the
countries in the region fully in line with VGGT. The legal
guidance will be applied in ongoing and future FAO projects and
will hopefully be useful for governments and international
organizations as well.
Since the 1980s, there has been a tendency in many European
countries with land consolidation programmes for the emphasis of
land consolidation to shift from a focus on restructuring of
agriculture towards a more multi-functional approach by
balancing the interests of agriculture, landscape, nature
conservation, livelihood, recreation and transportation.(41
(42 Land
consolidation is by nature multi-functional but the focus of
land consolidation in the FAO programme countries in Europe and
Central Asia is mainly on agricultural development. This is very
understandable as addressing the structural problems of land
fragmentation and small farm sizes in these countries is the
driver behind introduction of land consolidation in the first
place. However, it is recommended already from the beginning to
design the land consolidation instrument so flexible that other
objectives can be pursued at later development stages.
References
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holdings. FAO.
Di Falco, S., Penov, I., Aleksiev, A., & van Rensburg, T.
(2010): Agrobiodiversity, farm profits and land
fragmentation: Evidence from Bulgaria. Land Use Policy, 27,
763-771.
FAO (1955): The State of Food and Agriculture 1955 – review
of a decade and outlook. Rome. September 1955.
FAO (2003): The design of land consolidation pilot projects in
Central and Eastern Europe. FAO Land Tenure Studies 6. Rome.
FAO (2004): Operations manual for land consolidation pilot
projects in Central and Eastern Europe. FAO Land Tenure Manuals
no. 1. Rome.
FAO (2008): Opportunities to mainstream land consolidation in
rural development programmes of the European Union. FAO Land
Tenure Policy Series 2. Rome.
FAO (2012): Voluntary guidelines on the responsible governance
of tenure of land, fisheries and forests in the context of
national food security. CFS Rome.
FAO (2017a): Policy note on land abandonment and recommendations
for policy advice on introduction of a land consolidation
instrument in Armenia. Prepared under GCP/ARM/006/EC.
FAO (2017b): Report on the legal framework for land
consolidation and the draft Law on Land Consolidation in
Ukraine. TCP/UKR/3601.
FAO (2018): Empowering Smallholders and Family farms in Europe
and Central Asia - Regional Synthesis Report. FAO REU Budapest.
Haldrup, N.O. (2011): Land registration in developing countries
– An introduction. Lambert Adademic Publishing.
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Europe after 1989 and its outcome in form of farm structures and
land fragmentation. FAO Land Tenure Working Paper 24. Web link:
http://www.fao.org/docrep/017/aq097e/aq097e.pdf
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Weblink:
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S026483771300166X
Hartvigsen, M. (2014a): Land Mobility in a Central and Eastern
European Land Consolidation Context. Nordic Journal of Surveying
and Real Estate Research. Volume 10, Number 1, 2014. Weblink:
http://ojs.tsv.fi/index.php/njs/article/view/41460
Hartvigsen, M. (2014b): Land consolidation and land banking in
Denmark – tradition, multi-purpose and perspectives. Danish
Journal of Geoinformatics and Land Management, Year 122, Vol.
47, 1-7 (2014). Weblink:
http://www.journals.aau.dk/index.php/tka/article/view/987.
Hartvigsen, M. (2015a): Experiences with land consolidation and
land banking in Central and Eastern Europe after 1989. FAO Land
Tenure Working Paper 26. Weblink:
http://www.fao.org/3/a-i4352e.pdf
Hartvigsen, M. (2015b): Integrated voluntary land consolidation
– A Third model for land consolidation in Central and Eastern
Europe. FAO Land Tenure Journal 1-2015, 9-43.
Hartvigsen, M. (2016): Land consolidation in Central and Eastern
Europe – Integration with local rural development needs. Paper
presented at World Bank Land and Poverty Conference, March 2016.
Lerman, Z. et al. (2004): Agriculture in Transition – Land
Policies and Evolving Farm Structures in Post-Soviet Countries.
Lexinton Books.
Meliczek, H. (1973): The work of FAO and experiences in land
consolidation. Land Reform, Land Settlement and Co-operatives.
FAO. Rome, 1973. Number 1, 50-63.
Palmer, D., Munro-Faure, P. and Rembold, F. (2004): Land
consolidation and rural development in Central and Eastern
Europe. ZfV - Zeitschrift für Geodäesie, Geoinformation und
Landmanagement 2/2004.
Riddell, J. and Rembold, F. (2002): Farm Land Rationalisation
and Land Consolidation: Strategies for Improved Land Management
In Eastern and Central Europe. Paper presented during the
International Symposium” Land Fragmentation and Land
Consolidation in CEEC: A gate towards sustainable rural
development in the new millennium; Munich, February 2002.
Schmidt-Kallert, E. (2004): A Short Introduction to
Micro-Regional Planning. FAO. Budapest.
Törhönen, M-P (2016): Keys to Successful Land Administration -
Lessons Learned in 20 Years of ECA Land Projects. World Bank
Group.
USAID (2011): USAID Country Profile – Property Rights and
Resource Governance - Kyrgyzstan.
Van Holst, F., Hartvigsen, M., Ónega Lopex, F. (2018): Land
governance for development in Central and Eastern Europe: Land
fragmentation and land consolidation as part of Sustainable
Development Goals. World Bank Land and Poverty Conference, March
2018.
NOTES
- Binns, B. (1950): The consolidation of fragmented
agricultural holdings. FAO.
- Meliczek, H. (1973): The work of FAO and experiences in
land consolidation. Land Reform, Land Settlement and
Co-operatives, FAO. Rome, 1973. Number 1, 50-63.
- FAO (1955): The State of Food and Agriculture 1955 –
review of a decade and outlook. Rome. September 1955.
- Jacoby, E.H. (1959): Land Consolidation in Europe.
- Palmer, D., Munro-Faure, P. and Rembold, F. (2004): Land
consolidation and rural development in Central and Eastern
Europe. ZfV - Zeitschrift für Geodäesie, Geoinformation und
Landmanagement 2/200
- Proceedings from FAO LANDNET
workshops from 2002 are available at:
http://www.fao.org/europe/resources/land-tenure-workshops/en/
- FAO (2012): Voluntary guidelines on the responsible
governance of tenure of land, fisheries and forests in the
context of national food security. CFS Rome.
- FAO (2018): Empowering Smallholders and Family farms in
Europe and Central Asia - Regional Synthesis Report. FAO REU
Budapest.
- Lerman, Z. et al. (2004): Agriculture in Transition – Land
Policies and Evolving Farm Structures in Post-Soviet
Countries. Lexinton Books, p. 3.
- Hartvigsen, M., (2013a): Land Reform in Central and Eastern
Europe after 1989 and its outcome in form of farm structures
and land fragmentation. FAO Land Tenure Working Paper 24.
- Hartvigsen, M. (2013b): Land Reform and land fragmentation
in Central and Eastern Europe. Land Use Policy 36 (2014),
330-341.
- Hartvigsen, M., (2013a): Land Reform in Central and
Eastern Europe after 1989 and its outcome in form of farm
structures and land fragmentation. FAO Land Tenure Working
Paper 24.
- FAO (2018): Empowering Smallholders and Family farms in
Europe and Central Asia - Regional Synthesis Report. FAO REU
Budapest.
- USAID (2011): USAID Country Profile – Property Rights
and Resource Governance - Kyrgyzstan.
- FAO (2018): Empowering Smallholders and Family farms in
Europe and Central Asia - Regional Synthesis Report. FAO REU
Budapest.
- Di Falco, S., Penov, I., Aleksiev, A., & van Rensburg,
T. (2010): Agrobiodiversity, farm profits and land
fragmentation: Evidence from Bulgaria. Land Use Policy, 27
- FAO (2017a): Policy note on land abandonment and
recommendations for policy advice on introduction of a land
consolidation instrument in Armenia. Prepared under
GCP/ARM/006/EC.
-
http://www.fao.org/europe/regional-perspectives/smallholders-family-farms/en/
- Törhönen, M-P. (2016): Keys to Successful Land
Administration - Lessons Learned in 20 Years of ECA Land
Projects. World Bank Group.
- Haldrup, N.O. (2011): Land registration in developing
countries – an introduction. Lambert Adademic Publishing. P.
73-75.
- Hartvigsen, M. (2015a): Experiences with land consolidation
and land banking in Central and Eastern Europe after 1989.
FAO Land Tenure Working Paper 26. P. 4-5.
-
Ibid, p. 105.
- Riddell, J. and Rembold, F. (2002): Farm Land
Rationalisation and Land Consolidation: Strategies for
Improved Land Management in Eastern and Central Europe.
Paper presented during the International Symposium” Land
Fragmentation and Land Consolidation in CEEC: A gate towards
sustainable rural development in the new millennium; Munich,
February 2002.
- FAO (2003): The design of land consolidation pilot
projects in Central and Eastern Europe. FAO Land Tenure
Studies 6.
FAO (2004): Operations manual for land consolidation pilot
projects in Central and Eastern Europe. FAO Land Tenure
Manuals 1.
FAO (2008): Opportunities to mainstream land consolidation
in rural development programmes of the European Union. FAO
Land Tenure Policy Series 2.
- Hartvigsen, M. (2015a): Experiences with land consolidation
and land banking in Central and Eastern Europe after 1989.
FAO Land Tenure Working Paper 26.
- FAO (2017b): Report on the legal framework for land
consolidation and the draft Law on Land Consolidation in
Ukraine. TCP/UKR/3601.
- Hartvigsen, M. (2015a): Experiences with land consolidation
and land banking in Central and Eastern Europe after 1989.
FAO Land Tenure Working Paper 26. P. 67-69.
-
Van Holst, F., Hartvigsen, M., Ónega Lopex, F. (2018): Land
governance for development in Central and Eastern Europe:
Land fragmentation and land consolidation as part of
Sustainable Development Goals. World Bank Land and Poverty
Conference, March 2018.
- FAO (2012): Voluntary guidelines on the responsible
governance of tenure of land, fisheries and forests in the
context of national food security. CFS Rome.
- Hartvigsen, M. (2015b): Integrated voluntary land
consolidation – A Third model for land consolidation in
Central and Eastern Europe. FAO Land Tenure Journal 1-2015,
9-43.
- Ibid.
- Hartvigsen, M. (2016): Land consolidation in Central and Eastern
Europe – Integration with local rural development needs.
Paper presented at World Bank Land and Poverty Conference,
March 2016.
- Schmidt-Kallert, E. (2004): A Short
Introduction to Micro-Regional Planning. FAO. Budapest.
-
https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/?menu=1300
- Hartvigsen, M. (2014a): Land Mobility in a Central and
Eastern European Land Consolidation Context. Nordic Journal
of Surveying and Real Estate Research. Volume 10, Number 1,
2014. Weblink:
http://ojs.tsv.fi/index.php/njs/article/view/41460
- Hartvigsen, M. (2015a): Experiences with land
consolidation and land banking in Central and Eastern Europe
after 1989. FAO Land Tenure Working Paper 26. P. 36-41 and
67-69.
- Ibid, p. 49.
- Meliczek, H. (1973): The work of FAO and experiences in
land consolidation. Land Reform, Land Settlement and
Co-operatives, FAO. Rome, 1973. Number 1, 50-63.
- Van Holst, F., Hartvigsen, M., Ónega Lopex, F. (2018):
Land governance for development in Central and Eastern
Europe: Land fragmentation and land consolidation as part of
Sustainable Development Goals. World Bank Land and Poverty
Conference, March 2018.
- Hartvigsen, M. (2015a): Experiences with land
consolidation and land banking in Central and Eastern Europe
after 1989. FAO Land Tenure Working Paper 26. P. 36-41.
- Hartvigsen, M. (2016): Land consolidation
in Central and Eastern Europe – Integration with local rural
development needs. Paper presented at World Bank Land and
Poverty Conference, March 2016.
- Hartvigsen, M. (2014b): Land consolidation
and land banking in Denmark – tradition, multi-purpose and
perspectives. Danish Journal of Geoinformatics and Land
Management, Year 122, Vol. 47, 1-7 (2014).
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES
The author is since 2015 working for the Food and Agriculture
Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the Regional Office
for Europe and Central Asia, as Land Tenure Officer and Delivery
Manager of the FAO Regional Initiative in support of
smallholders and family farms. He graduated as Chartered
Surveyor in 1991 from Aalborg University, Denmark. In 2015, the
author defended at Aalborg University his PhD Thesis “Land
Reform and Land Consolidation in Central and Eastern Europe
after 1989 – Experiences and Perspectives”. In his professional
career, he was during 1991 – 2006 employed by the Land
Consolidation and Land Banking Unit of the Danish Ministry of
Food and Environment. During 2006 – 2015, he was Head of the
Land Management Section at Orbicon A/S, a private Danish
consultancy. He has over the years been responsible for the
implementation of a large number of land consolidation projects
in Denmark. During 2000 - 2015, he worked as international
consultant and team leader for FAO, the World Bank and others on
projects in relation to land consolidation, land management and
rural development.
CONTACTS
Morten HARTVIGSEN
Land Tenure Officer / Regional Initiative Delivery Manager
FAO Regional Office for Europe and Central Asia
Benczur utca 34
1068 Budapest
HUNGARY
Tel. +36 30 559 8455
Email: Morten.Hartvigsen[ad]fao.org
Web site FAO REU:
http://www.fao.org/europe/en/