The table below shows trade in table olives in the 2021/22 crop year[1] 2021/22 (September 2021-January 2022). Imports fell by 18% in Australia, 28% in Brazil and 20% in Canada compared to the same period the previous crop year. Imports rose by 2% in the US.
In the 2021/22 crop year (September-December 2021), intra-EU acquisitions rose by 12% and extra-EU imports fell by 16% compared to the same period the previous crop year[2].
[1] According to the new provisions of the International Agreement on Olive Oil and Table Olives, 2015, ‘table olive crop year’ means the twelve months from 1 September of one year to 31 August of the next.
[2] Data for the EU were not available for January 2022 when this newsletter went to print.
Table olive imports (t)
[1] According to the new provisions of the International Agreement on Olive Oil and Table Olives, 2015, ‘table olive crop year’ means the twelve months from 1 September of one year to 31 August of the next.
[1] Data for the EU were not available for January 2022 when this newsletter went to print.
Further information is available on this link: https://www.internationaloliveoil.org/what-we-do/economic-affairs-promotion-unit/