PREAH VIHEAR, Cambodia — Vegetation lurches over a concrete wall that runs alongside a quiet road in the northern Cambodian province of Preah Vihear. Behind the wall, and the rusty gate that serves as the only entrance point, sits one of Cambodia’s three medium-sized cashew nut processing factories. At 2 p.m. on a Thursday in late November last year, the road is silent under the sun. Across the road, baking in the heat, sits a barren stretch of land where a forest once stood. In 2017, when the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) launched a program giving taxpayer-funded grants to help boost Cambodia’s agricultural productivity, it turned to outfits like this. Cambodia is a major producer of cashews, with some estimates suggesting as much as 700,000 hectares (1.7 million acres) reportedly under cultivation. But roughly 95% of its cashew exports are shipped raw to Vietnam, amounting to 711,513 metric tons in 2022, according to UN data, meaning that most of the profits from the nuts were generated elsewhere. Among the numerous agricultural suppliers to receive funding was the owner of this facility: Santana Agro Products, a politically connected company primarily focused on cashew cultivation and processing, to which USAID awarded $96,700 between Oct. 15, 2018, and March 31, 2020, and which is listed on the United Nations Development Programme’s Sustainable Development Goals investor platform. Things were quiet outside the Santana Agro factory when reporters visited one afternoon in November 2023. Image by Gerald Flynn / Mongabay. Such investment…This article was originally published on Mongabay
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