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Turkish Producers Achieve Exceptional Results with Native Olive Varieties

Farmers and millers across Turkey overcame extreme weather conditions and a significant decline in yield to win 28 awards at the 2024 NYIOOC World Olive Oil Competition.
Group of women harvesting olives from trees in an orchard with sunlight filtering through the leaves. - Olive Oil Times
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By Costas Vasilopoulos
May. 13, 2024 15:17 UTC
Summary Summary

Turkey expe­ri­enced a sig­nif­i­cant drop in olive oil pro­duc­tion in the 2023/24 crop year, with yields falling to 180,000 tons from a record high of 421,000 tons the pre­vi­ous year. Despite chal­lenges like poor weather con­di­tions and qual­ity issues, Turkish olive oil pro­duc­ers won 29 awards at the 2024 NYIOOC World Olive Oil Competition, show­cas­ing their ded­i­ca­tion to pro­duc­ing high-qual­ity olive oils.

Turkey was no excep­tion to the rule of reduced olive oil yields across the Mediterranean in the 2023/24 crop year, with pro­duc­tion falling from a record yield of 421,000 tons of olive oil in 2022/23 to around 180,000 tons, below the five-year aver­age of 254,600 tons.

Echoing their coun­ter­parts in other Mediterranean-pro­duc­ing coun­tries, Turkish olive oil pro­duc­ers expressed their anguish over the low yields in an Olive Oil Times sur­vey on the 2023/24 har­vest last December.

These awards val­i­date our efforts to pro­duce high-qual­ity olive oils that show­case the unique fla­vors and char­ac­ter­is­tics of Turkish olive vari­eties.- Tuba Yilmaz, owner, Gaia Oliva

Poor weather con­di­tions and frosts at the end of March [2023] did a lot of dam­age to the olive flow­ers and their sub­se­quent pro­duc­tion,” pro­ducer Mustafa Safa Soydan said. For some elderly farm­ers, there has never been such a poor har­vest since 1990.”

Some of the coun­try’s pro­duc­ers also reported prob­lems with the qual­ity of their fresh olive oils, which occurred spo­rad­i­cally in some pro­duc­ing regions.

See Also:The best extra vir­gin olive oils from Turkey

In this con­text, Turkish extra vir­gin olive oil pro­duc­ers, bot­ters and exporters com­bined to win 29 awards (17 Gold and 11 Silver) from 52 entries of the industry’s most cov­eted awards at the 2024 NYIOOC World Olive Oil Competition.

According to the Olive Oil Times World Ranking, they sub­mit­ted 56 fewer brands in this year’s con­test than in 2023 and suc­ceeded with 56 per­cent of their entries.

Twenty-four of the 29 win­ning extra vir­gin olive oil brands were crafted from endemic olive vari­eties, includ­ing Memecik, Ayvalik, Edremit, Trilye, Domat, Gemlik, Hanim Parmagi and Kilis.

Returning par­tic­i­pant Gaia Oliva suc­cess­fully adjusted to the season’s require­ments to cel­e­brate two Gold Awards at the NYIOOC this year for its epony­mous Memecik and Ayvalik early har­vest mono­va­ri­etals, extend­ing its win­ning streak to four years.

The producers behind Gaia Oliva celebrated a fourth-straight yeart of success at the World Competition for native monovarietals. (Photo: Gaia Oliva)

Winning two Gold Awards at the 2024 NYIOOC is truly an honor for us and a tes­ta­ment to our team’s ded­i­ca­tion and hard work,” said owner Tuba Yilmaz. For our com­pany, these awards val­i­date our efforts to pro­duce high-qual­ity olive oils that show­case the unique fla­vors and char­ac­ter­is­tics of Turkish olive vari­eties.”

Yilmaz noted that the sea­son was far from sim­ple. High tem­per­a­tures and unex­pected rain­fall affected the har­vest and dis­rupted the estab­lished pat­terns in olive tree cul­ti­va­tion.

Shifts in tem­per­a­ture and pre­cip­i­ta­tion pat­terns have led to unpre­dictable grow­ing sea­sons,” she said. Despite these adver­si­ties, our team demon­strated remark­able resilience and exper­tise. Through care­ful plan­ning and hard work, we were able to adapt to chang­ing con­di­tions and mit­i­gate the effects of adverse weather. “

Eminem’s Olive Oil, another return­ing entrant to the World Competition from Turkey’s Muğla province, once again mea­sured up to the com­pe­ti­tion, earn­ing a Gold Award for its organic Oro di Milas brand from Memecik olives.

Oro di Milas overcame a range of challenges to produce ten tons of extra virign olive oil in the 2023/24 crop year. (Photo: Eminem’s Olive Oil)

We feel hon­ored to have been given this recog­ni­tion, espe­cially with the dif­fi­cul­ties in 2023,” co-owner Mark Colin said.

Colin also cited numer­ous chal­lenges that ham­pered the 2023/24 har­vest, includ­ing weather extremes, labor short­ages and the impact of the olive fruit fly.

In the company’s com­pe­ti­tion debut at the 2023 NYIOOC, Eminem’s Olive Oil won two Gold Awards for a pair of organic medium Memecik mono­va­ri­etals.

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Devotion to pro­duc­ing high-qual­ity olive oil was the dri­ving force behind the Gold Award won by Garisar for its epony­mous Arbequina mono­va­ri­etal, repeat­ing its suc­cess from last year’s edi­tion of the World Competition.

We are proud that our Arbequina olive oil won a Gold Award at the 2024 NYIOOC,” said Davut Ayvaz, the company’s exec­u­tive man­ager. This suc­cess proves that our qual­ity stan­dards, which we have worked devot­edly for years, have been appre­ci­ated once again.”

It’s been a dif­fi­cult sea­son,” Ayvaz added. It was very impor­tant for us to see once again how valu­able our efforts and ded­i­ca­tion were, no mat­ter how adverse the sea­sonal con­di­tions were. We have full con­fi­dence that we will win many more awards.”

The vast major­ity of the country’s win­ning pro­duc­ers came from the Aegean coast of west­ern Anatolia, where a sig­nif­i­cant por­tion of the country’s olive oil is pro­duced, includ­ing Manisa province.

I am very happy and hon­ored to receive an award at the NYIOOC this year, for the sec­ond time in a row,” said Zeynep Belger, the female entre­pre­neur behind Zayto, after join­ing the elite list of win­ners at the 2024 NYIOOC.

Despite late-spring rain damaging the olive trees as they were flowering, Zayto achieved award-winning quality at the 2024 NYIOOC. (Photo: Zayto)

Zayto won a Gold Award for its Zayto Saittai robust mono­va­ri­etal. The pro­ducer sources her olives from the Gemlik vari­ety (also known as Trilye) in Manisa, one of the country’s main olive oil-pro­duc­ing regions.

With their trees close to the majes­tic Dardanelles straits in north­west­ern Turkey, True Olive over­came the drought to win its first-ever World Competition acco­lade, a Silver Award for its Private Reserve brand from Edremit olives.

The pro­ducer also had to sur­vive a wild­fire that rav­aged its land a decade ago, nur­tur­ing and regen­er­at­ing its burnt olive trees to pro­duce high-qual­ity olive oil.

Winning is an inde­scrib­able joy for all of us,” said co-owner Nicole Babaoglu. It is the best reward for all the hard work dur­ing this chal­leng­ing year. The drought posed a sig­nif­i­cant chal­lenge this har­vest, but work­ing together, we were still able to make the best of the sit­u­a­tion.”

Claiming the Silver Award inspires a deter­mi­na­tion to bring home Gold in 2025,” she added.


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