Europe’s olive oil supply running out after
drought – and the odd hailstorm
Heatwaves around Mediterranean have damaged harvests
and forced producers to import from South America
Sarah
Butler, Sam Jones and Helena Smith
Thu 28 Sep
2023 16.35 BST
Europe has
almost run out of local olive oil supplies and is set for more shortages, after
extreme weather damaged harvests for a second year.
The world’s
largest producer has said it is having to import supplies from South America to
keep up with demand.
“Today it
is almost physically impossible to buy olive oil. It is sold out,” Walter
Zanre, the chief executive of the UK arm of Filippo Berio, said.
Olive trees
have been cultivated around the Mediterranean for thousands of years, with
Spain alone producing half of the world’s supply of olive oil, but wildfires
and soaring summer temperatures mean the future of this ancient industry is
looking increasingly uncertain.
Global
production is expected to fall to 2.4m tonnes according to the International
Olive Council, less than last year’s harvest and well short of global demand of
about 3m tonnes, after drought and heatwaves of more than 40 degrees hit
production in Spain.
Extreme
weather in other important growing regions including Greece, Italy and Portugal
as well as Turkey and Morocco has added to the crisis.
Zanre said
the company still had stock to meet its delivery demands but had been forced to
import olive oil from Chile to cover the gap before the arrival of this year’s
harvest, which begins in October, as wholesale supplies ran dry across Europe.
The size of
this year’s harvest was now “a long way adrift” of historic norms, with Spain
expected to produce 750,000 tonnes – more than the 660,00 produced in last
year’s poor harvest but well short of the 1.3m tonnes or so that could be
counted on in past years.
“We have
been saddled with another difficult year,” said Zanre. “During the early part
of the summer we thought things might get better but as the summer has
progressed things have got worse.”
Farmers say
their incomes have taken a hit as poor crops combine with rising costs on
energy and labour.
Rafa
Guzmán, an olive grower in Jaén – the cradle of Spain’s olive production – who
also serves as the local head of Asaja, Spain’s biggest farming association,
said some farmers were facing ruin as drought conditions continued to take
their toll.
“The
harvest here is down 70-80%,” he said. “There are some growers who haven’t even
had a kilo of olives. Even if olive oil is selling for €8 a bottle, that’s not
enough to keep them afloat.
“It’s just
awful for people down here. There’s always been the odd bad harvest, like last
year. But two bad harvests in a row? I can’t remember any – and I’m 50 and have
been working the trees with my dad since I was a kid. There are people who had
olives last year and have none this year. Some people may have to stop growing
olives. We don’t know.”
Greece is
expected to produce only 200,000 tonnes this year, a third less than last year
after extreme heat and problems with fruit fly infestations.
Manolis
Yiannoulis, the head of the Greek interprofessional olive oil association, said
consumers were experiencing price increases of “more than 100%”.
“We’re
looking at production rates being cut by half this year,” he said. “The
imbalance in demand and supply has already led to very big price increases,
which producers are enjoying but which are very much hurting consumers.”
Manufacturers
hold only about 115,000 metric tonnes of available olive oil stock in Spain,
according to analysts at commodities data group Mintec, against monthly usage
of about 60,000 tonnes.
“Should
this pace of depletion persist, market insiders warn that olive oil supplies
could be exhausted before the arrival of fresh harvests, which traditionally
commence in Spain around October,” Kyle Holland, the edible oils analyst at
Mintec, said.
Fears about
shortages have sent wholesale prices skywards. The cost of extra virgin olive
oil from Andalusia, in southern Spain, shot up to €8.45 per kg this month, more
than double last year’s price and the highest ever recorded for Spain based on
price data spanning more than 20 years.
That has
prompted a 47% rise in retail prices at big supermarkets in the UK, according
to analysts at Assosia.
Italy’s
hopes of producing up to 350,000 tonnes are thought to have been knocked by
extreme weather, including drought – and even recent hailstorms in the major
growing region of Puglia, which knocked ripe fruit from the trees.
Italy’s
growers have also been affected by the bacterial disease nicknamed “olive
ebola” – Xylella fastidiosa – which has killed 6m trees in recent years.
Tunisia,
Turkey and Syria have recently stopped exporting oil as they try to protect a
local staple from high prices internationally.
Zanre
predicts that the situation will get worse in the coming years as the climate
emergency is expected to mean hotter, drier and more extreme weather events .
“There is a huge pinch point on water,” he says. “Not just for olives but for
the whole of the Mediterranean growing region.”
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