Current:Home > NewsAs price of olive oil soars, chainsaw-wielding thieves target Mediterranean’s century-old trees-LoTradeCoin
As price of olive oil soars, chainsaw-wielding thieves target Mediterranean’s century-old trees
View Date:2025-01-11 07:34:21
SPATA, Greece (AP) — In an olive grove on the outskirts of Athens, grower Konstantinos Markou pushes aside the shoots of new growth to reveal the stump of a tree — a roughly 150-year-old specimen, he said, that was among 15 cut down on his neighbor’s land by thieves eager to turn it into money.
Surging olive oil prices, driven in part by two years of drought in Spain, has meant opportunity for criminals across the Mediterranean. Warehouse break-ins, dilution of premium oil with inferior product, and falsification of shipping data are on the rise in olive-growing heartlands of Greece, Spain and Italy. And perhaps worst of all: Gangs using chainsaws to steal heavily laden branches and even entire trees from unguarded groves.
“The olive robbers can sometimes produce more oil than the owners themselves – seriously,” Markou said, before heading off to patrol his own grove at nightfall.
The crimes mean fewer olives for growers already contending with high production costs and climate change that has brought warmer winters, major flooding and more intense forest fires. In Italy’s southern Puglia region, growers are pleading with police to form an agriculture division. Greek farmers want to bring back a rural police division that was phased out in 2010. In Spain, a company has developed tracking devices that look like olives to try and catch thieves.
The olive groves outside Athens are part of a tradition that stretches back to antiquity, on plains that now surround the city’s international airport. Some trees are centuries old.
Most of the thefts are branches. When an entire tree is cut down, the thieves typically cut it up and load the pieces into a pickup truck, selling the wood to lumber yards or firewood vendors and taking the olives to an oil mill.
“The (robbers) look for heavily loaded branches and they cut them,” said Neilos Papachristou, who runs an olive mill and nearby grove in a fourth-generation family business. “So, not only do they steal our olives, but they cause the tree serious harm. It takes 4-5 years for it to return to normal.”
The thefts are driving some growers to harvest early, which means accepting lower yields to avoid long-term damage to their trees. That includes Christos Bekas, who was among the farmers at Papachristou’s mill who were dumping their crop into stainless steel loading bins, untying sacks and tipping over tall wicker baskets from the back of their pickup trucks.
Bekas, who owns 5,000 olive trees, suffered repeated raids by thieves before deciding to take an early harvest. That has required more than than 2 1/2 times as much olives by weight to produce a kilogram of oil as last year, he said.
“And all this after we’ve been spending nights guarding our fields,” he said. ”The situation is appalling.”
After decades of growth, the global olive oil market has been disrupted by a nearly two-year drought in Spain, which typically accounts for about 40% of world supply. It’s expected to shrink global production to 2.5 million metric tons this crop year, down from 3.4 million a year earlier.
Benchmark prices in Spain, Greece and Italy for extra virgin oil reached 9 euros ($4.35 per pound) in September, more than tripling from their level in 2019.
That’s translated to higher prices for consumers. In Greece, a 1-liter bottle of extra virgin oil jumped from $8 to $9 last year to as much as $15 this year.
Spanish police said in October they had retrieved 91 tons of stolen olives in recent weeks. In February, six people were arrested in southern Greece for the theft of 8 tons of olive oil in a series of warehouse break-ins over several weeks.
Farmers around Italy’s southwestern port city of Bari say thieves have become increasingly brazen, snatching tractors and expensive equipment along with olives.
The regional agricultural association issued a plea for police assistance following reports that 100 olive trees were destroyed or seriously damaged in a single incident last month. Gennaro Sicolo, the association’s leader, called the economic damage “enormous” and said “farmers must be protected.”
“This is a felony,” Markou, the Greece grower, said of the tree-cutting. “You kill your own history here.”
___
AP journalists Ciaran Giles in Madrid, Colleen Barry in Milan and Raf Casert in Brussels contributed to this report.
___
Follow full AP coverage of climate and environment: https://apnews.com/climate-and-environment
veryGood! (83369)
Related
- Kentucky woman seeking abortion files lawsuit over state bans
- Horoscopes Today, April 20, 2024
- White Green: Emerging Star in Macro Strategic Investment
- Camp Lejeune Marine dies during training exercise, prompting investigation
- Black and Latino families displaced from Palm Springs neighborhood reach $27M tentative settlement
- What is a cicada? What to know about the loud insects set to take over parts of the US
- This week on Sunday Morning (April 21)
- Swiftie couple recreates Taylor Swift album covers
- Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan says next year will be his last in office; mum on his plans afterward
- NHL games today: Everything to know about Sunday playoff schedule
Ranking
- Deion Sanders doubles down on vow to 99-year-old Colorado superfan
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Higher Forces
- Nacho fries return to Taco Bell for longest run yet with new Secret Aardvark sauce
- Former Red Sox Player Dave McCarty Dead at 54
- Gigi Hadid and Bradley Cooper Prove They're Going Strong With Twinning Looks on NYC Date
- Can you use hyaluronic acid with retinol? A dermatologist breaks it down.
- David Pryor, former governor and senator of Arkansas, dies at age 89
- Key players: Who’s who at Donald Trump’s hush money criminal trial
Recommendation
-
Padma Lakshmi, John Boyega, Hunter Schafer star in Pirelli's 2025 calendar: See the photos
-
Iraq investigates a blast at a base of Iran-allied militias that killed 1. US denies involvement
-
The drug war devastated Black and other minority communities. Is marijuana legalization helping?
-
LSU gymnastics gets over the hump, wins first national championship in program history
-
Saks Fifth Avenue’s holiday light display in Manhattan changing up this season
-
This ancient snake in India might have been longer than a school bus and weighed a ton
-
Police to review security outside courthouse hosting Trump’s trial after man sets himself on fire
-
Everything to Know About Angel Numbers and How to Decode the Universe's Numerical Signs