Italian police seize olives ‘brightened’ with copper sulfate

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Published: February 11, 2016

ROME, Italy (Reuters) — Italian police have seized 85,000 tonnes of green olives treated with copper sulfate to brighten their colour and thousands of tonnes of foreign olive oil being passed off as “Made in Italy.”

Nineteen people face charges over the “painted” olives, including use of banned additives and planning to sell edible goods containing dangerous substances, the forestry police said.

Old olives from previous years’ harvests that had lost their colour were “recycled” with a coat of copper sulfate to give them an intense and uniform green colour.

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Police said copper sulfate was a clever choice because it is not normally classified as a colorant so food control authorities do not usually test for it.

The home of pizza and prosciutto has long struggled against counterfeiting of its prized culinary goods, and police estimate the domestic market for fake food is worth $1.5 billion a year.

Police also said they put six people under investigation in the southern Puglia region and seized 7,000 tonnes of olive oil purporting to be the Italian “extra virgin” variety that is prized for its rich taste and health benefits.

DNA tests showed the olives that yielded the oil were from places such as Syria and Turkey rather than Italy, the police statement said.

Thousands of tonnes of foreign oil falsely labelled as Italian had also been sold in North America and Japan, police said, feeding fears that counterfeits could damage the reputation of Italian food. Producers rely on a perception of luxury to sell at higher prices abroad.

Italian authorities say the olive industry’s nightmare year between 2014 and 2015, when bad weather, a fruit fly blight and a deadly bacterium hit crops, left the market more vulnerable to the risk of counterfeiting.

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