France: Why are the condiment industries worried?

Published Nov 13, 2023

Tridge summary

The Federation of Condiment Industries of France has warned of an olive shortage this year due to a drought and intense heatwaves affecting olive-producing countries in the Mediterranean. This will lead to a reduction in packaged olives, an increase in prices, and a shift towards using more olives for olive oil production. Morocco will also limit foreign transactions for the upcoming harvest due to strong domestic market demand.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The Federation of Condiment Industries of France (FICF*) warned on November 10 of the scarcity of the supply of olives this year, which will necessarily lead to a reduction in packaged and ready-to-eat olives and a sharp increase in prices. Mediterranean olive-producing countries have been suffering for two years from a drought which has reduced the flowering of olive trees, and intense heatwave episodes during the summer of 2023 have reduced the quantity and size of olives. The drop in volumes of table olives adds to strong pressure on the olive oil market, whose prices have tripled in two years after very poor 2022 and 2023 harvests. “A larger part of the olives will therefore be used for the production of olive oil, which is more profitable for producers than that of table olives,” regrets the FICF. In Spain, this will be the case for almost all Hojiblanca olives, as for the French Picholine variety. Morocco, whose domestic market demand remains very strong, will limit foreign ...
Source: Reussir

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