The Mail on Sunday

Icelanders at war with super-rich Sir Jim after he splashes £36m on salmon rivers

- By Jon Ungoed-Thomas

BRITISH billionair­e Sir Jim Ratcliffe is facing a revolt from Icelandic farmers after he bought up vast tracts of the country’s pristine wilderness to secure fishing rights to rivers there.

Accounts for the British holding company for his Icelandic operations, Halicilla, reveal how he has spent £ 36.2 million on farms in Iceland since 2016 as part of his project to conserve the North Atlantic salmon.

But new laws introduced amid concerns over Ratcliffe’s spending spree means he could be banned from making further land purchases there.

The 68- year- old, Britain’s fifthriche­st person and worth an estimated £ 12.2 billion, now owns or part-owns 39 Icelandic farms.

They include land adjoining the River Hofsá, where the young Prince Charles once fished – as seen in the most recent season of Netflix series The Crown. Another river, the Selá, has been fished by the late US President George H. W. Bush, who described it as ‘astounding­ly beautiful’. Ratcliffe also owns angling rights on four other of the main rivers in north-east Iceland: the Hafralonsa, Svalbardsa, Miofjaroar­a and Vesturdals­a.

Ratcliffe, a leading Brexiteer who is now based in Monaco, is the chief executive and majority owner of the petrochemi­cal giant Ineos.

Icelandic financial journalist Sigrun Davidsdott­ir said there had been a lack of transparen­cy over the purchases from farmers who had been on the land for generation­s.

She said: ‘Ratcliffe is now the biggest private landowner in Iceland by far. He has no connection­s to the community and it has caused a lot of public concern over the land’s future use. Our rivers are a valuable asset and are well taken care of, so what Jim Ratcliffe is offering is good, but not essential, and it means the farmers lose control of the land, the rivers and the profits from the fishing rights.’

She said the tycoon’s commitment to conserving the environmen­t felt like ‘greenwashi­ng’ when he presided over one of the world’s biggest petrochemi­cals giants.

Johannes Sigfusson, 67, whose 7,400- acre sheep farm bordering t he River Hafralonsa has been farmed by his family since 1880, said last week: ‘ I don’t know [ Sir Jim Ratcliffe], but it’s not good for one man to buy so much land.’

Ratcliffe’s ‘Six Rivers Conservati­on Project’ in Iceland aims to ensure the sustainabi­lity of North Atlantic salmon stocks in the rivers.

The legislatio­n aimed at restrictin­g land sales, which was passed by the Icelandic parliament last July, requires landowners who own 10,000 hectares or more to get a ministeria­l exemption for further purchases. G is li As geirsson,di rector of Strengur Angling Club, controlled by Ratcliffe, said there had been some ‘ludicrous’ suspicions about the bill i onaire’s reasons for buying farms, and his sole mission was conservati­on. Ineos did not respond to a request for comment.

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 ??  ?? PRISTINE WILDERNESS: A stream flowing from Iceland’s Hofsa River. Right: British tycoon Ratcliffe
PRISTINE WILDERNESS: A stream flowing from Iceland’s Hofsa River. Right: British tycoon Ratcliffe
 ??  ?? UNDER THREAT: A wild salmon
UNDER THREAT: A wild salmon

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