The sale of Australia's biggest private landowner, cattle firm S Kidman and Co, has attracted keen interest from Chinese companies. But the government has rejected two Chinese-led bids, citing the national interest.
The new AUD 386 million (USD 294 million) offer announced today came just two weeks after Australian mining magnate Gina Rinehart and Chinese property developer Shanghai CRED announced a joint AUD 365 million bid.
"We have developed a compelling and superior proposal to that recently supported by the Kidman board which will see Kidman 100 per cent Australian-owned," one of the pastoralists Sterling Buntine said in a statement.
"The four families comprising the consortium are deeply committed to honouring and preserving the Kidman heritage and brand which will continue under the stewardship of highly regarded and successful Australian graziers."
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The other consortium members are Tom Brinkworth, Malcolm Harris and Viv Oldfield, all of whom have sizable properties across the vast island continent.
Under the Australian proposal, Anna Creek station in South Australia - which is next to a rocket testing range - is included in the deal.
There had been optimism that Rinehart's Hancock Prospecting joint offer with Shanghai CRED, which would see her firm acquire 67 per cent of Kidman with the Chinese company holding 33 per cent, would get the green light from Canberra.
Shanghai CRED was part of a Chinese consortium involved in the previous offers. But the Chinese stake in the current bid would be significantly smaller than previously.
It is a key source of beef for export to Japan, the United States and Southeast Asia.
There has been growing concern in Australia about the purchase of local infrastructure and land by foreign interests. An all-Australian consortium bought half of the nation's largest electricity network on Thursday after Canberra rejected a Chinese bid, citing national security.