Inside Europe’s fight against fake olive oil

Olive oil fraud has spiked in Europe this year.

The number of cross-border EU notifications for the ingredient, which includes mislabelling, potential fraud and food safety incidents, reached 50 in the first three months of the year, according to data released by the European Commission under freedom of information laws. This represents more than a threefold increase compared to the same period six years ago.

A series of high-profile seizures of fake olive oil have also hit headlines.

In July, the Portuguese Food & Economic Security Authority seized over €57,000 (£48,000) worth of cooking oil during a raid at a refining site in Torres Novas, central Portugal, amid suspicions it would be sold as olive oil. In fact, authorities seized 177,690 labels that mentioned olive oil during the same raid.

And earlier the same month, tonnes of fake olive oil were confiscated in Puglia, Italy by police. Seven people have been accused of criminal conspiracy in connection with the seizure, with some 42 tonnes already packaged for sale and the rest ready for distribution, according to the country’s authorities.

Fraud ‘in overdrive’

The recent increase in incidents of olive oil fraud and mislabelling reflect the impact of squeezed supplies on the global market, explains Eurof Uppington, CEO and founder of Amfora, a Switzerland-based importer of extra virgin olive oils. “There are low levels of fraud all the time, but it’s gone into overdrive because of the rise in price and the fall in supply,” he says.

In 2021, Spain produced 44% of the world’s oil and and accounted for 59% of international sales, according to the International Olive Oil Council, with a significant proportion of that production taking place in the southern agricultural region of Andalusia. But record-breaking high spring temperatures in 2022, followed by unseasonable drought and then extreme flooding in 2023 destroyed some half of the area’s crops. “That rarely happens, having two failed harvests in a row hasn’t happened in 30 years or so,” adds Uppington. “It’s meant there’s been a huge drop in global stocks and massive price increases.” In fact, figures from market analyst Mintec Global showed a record high of €9.20 per kg​ in January. “That means the rewards for the fraudsters are so much greater.”