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Greek Olive Oil: Price Drops, Surplus, and a Push for a National Plan

Greek Olive Oil: Price Drops, Surplus, and a Push for a National Plan

Hellenic Shipping News

Greece’s olive oil industry finds itself at a critical turning point. A sharp

Greece’s olive oil industry finds itself at a critical turning point. A sharp drop in domestic demand has left nearly 40% to 50% of this year’s harvest unsold, creating a surplus that is placing intense pressure on producers. Farmgate prices have plunged to around 3.80 euros per liter—barely covering production costs and raising concerns across the supply chain.

At the same time, olive oil consumption in Greece has fallen to 9.7 liters per person, pushing bottlers to revive demand for branded products, while supermarket sales have also shrunk to just 15,800 tons.

Data presented by representatives of SEVITEL, the Association of Greek Olive Oil Standardization Industries, paints a stark picture: of the 250,000 tons produced annually in Greece, only 110,000 tons are intended for domestic consumption. Out of that, a mere 15,800 tons are sold as branded products on store shelves, while the remaining 95,000 tons are distributed in traditional 16-liter tins—often unbranded and lacking quality assurance.

Exports show a similar imbalance. While 45,000 tons of branded olive oil are shipped abroad, almost 100,000 tons are exported in bulk—mainly to Italy—where it is often repackaged and sold at a premium under foreign labels.

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