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Olive Oil Price Dip Adds to European Woes
Financial Times | May 28, 2012 | 01:06 AM EDT

Spain, Italy and Greece, already fighting a financial and economic crisis, are now facing an oil crisis. Olive oil, that is. the Financial Times reports.

The price of the Mediterranean diet staple has plunged to a 10-year low as domestic consumption in the top producing southern European countries has fallen because of the economic crisis.

That fall has coincided with a bumper olive crop in Spain, the biggest grower, creating a glut that has forced the EU to intervene to reduce the surplus amid worries about rural incomes.

“The market is in serious crisis,” said Pekka Pesonen, head of the Copa-Cogeca farming union in Brussels. “This crop is vital for the main producing countries in terms of maintaining employment in their rural areas.”

Spain, Italy and Greece are by far the largest producers of the commodity, accounting for 70 percent of the world’s olive oil output. The crop is critical for some of the poorest areas of Spain, including top producing region Andalucia, where the unemployment rate last quarter surged to 33 percent.

The EU has tried to deal with the surplus by paying companies to stockpile oil – the commodities market version of the European Central Bank buying sovereign bonds of Spain, Italy and Greece. Farming trade union officials and other policy makers believe the EU’s move has put a floor under prices.

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