Top 20 Olive Oil Producing Countries (1961-2019)

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Olive oil is a liquid fat obtained from olives (the fruit of Olea europaea; family Oleaceae), a traditional tree crop of the Mediterranean Basin, produced by pressing whole olives and extracting the oil. Olive oil is the most common vegetable oil. It is commonly used in cooking, for frying foods or as a salad dressing. It is also used in cosmetics, pharmaceuticals, and soaps, and as a fuel for traditional oil lamps, and has additional uses in some religions. There is limited evidence of its possible health benefits. The olive is one of three core food plants in Mediterranean cuisine; the other two are wheat and grapes. Olive trees have been grown around the Mediterranean since the 8th millennium BC.

The top five producers of olive oil by volume are Spain, Morocco, Turkey, Greece, and Italy. However, per capita national consumption is highest in Greece, followed by Spain and Italy. The composition of olive oil varies with the cultivar, altitude, time of harvest and extraction process. It consists mainly of oleic acid (up to 83%), with smaller amounts of other fatty acids including linoleic acid (up to 21%) and palmitic acid (up to 20%). Extra virgin olive oil is required to have no more than 0.8% free acidity and is considered to have favorable flavor characteristics.

Olive oil has long been a common ingredient in Mediterranean cuisine, including ancient Greek and Roman cuisine. Wild olives, which originated in Asia Minor, were collected by Neolithic people as early as the 8th millennium BC. Besides food, olive oil has been used for religious rituals, medicines, as a fuel in oil lamps, soap-making, and skin care application. The Spartans and other Greeks used oil to rub themselves while exercising in the gymnasia. From its beginnings early in the 7th century BC, the cosmetic use of olive oil quickly spread to all of the Hellenic city states, together with athletes training in the nude, and lasted close to a thousand years despite its great expense. Olive oil was also popular as a form of birth control; Aristotle in his History of Animals recommends applying a mixture of olive oil combined with either oil of cedar, ointment of lead, or ointment of frankincense to the cervix to prevent pregnancy.

It is not clear when and where olive trees were first domesticated. According to an article published by Reviews in Environmental Science and Biotechnology the modern olive tree most likely originated in ancient Persia and Mesopotamia spreading towards Syria and Israel in the Mediterranean Basin where it was cultivated and later introduced to North Africa. Some scholars have argued that olive cultivation originated with the Ancient Egyptians.

The olive tree reached Greece, Carthage and Libya sometime in the 28th century BC, having been spread westward by the Phoenicians. Until around 1500 BC, eastern coastal areas of the Mediterranean were most heavily cultivated. Evidence also suggests that olives were being grown in Crete as long ago as 2500 BC. The earliest surviving olive oil amphorae date to 3500 BC (Early Minoan times), though the production of olive oil is assumed to have started before 4000 BC. Olive trees were certainly cultivated by the Late Minoan period (1500 BC) in Crete, and perhaps as early as the Early Minoan. The cultivation of olive trees in Crete became particularly intense in the post-palatial period and played an important role in the island's economy, as it did across the Mediterranean. Later, as Greek colonies were established in other parts of the Mediterranean, olive farming was introduced to places like Spain and continued to spread throughout the Roman Empire.

Archaeological evidence shows that by 6000 BC olives were being turned into olive oil and 4500 BC at a now-submerged prehistoric settlement south of Haifa. Olive trees and oil production in the Eastern Mediterranean can be traced to archives of the ancient city-state Ebla (2600–2240 BC), which were located on the outskirts of the Syrian city Aleppo. Here some dozen documents dated 2400 BC describe lands of the king and the queen. These belonged to a library of clay tablets perfectly preserved by having been baked in the fire that destroyed the palace. A later source is the frequent mentions of oil in the Tanakh.

Tags:
Spain Economy, Spain Olive Oil, Economy of Italy, Italy Olive Oil, Egypt Economy, Egypt Olive Oil, Turkey Economy, Turkey Olive Oil, Syria Economy, Syria Olive Oil, Greece Economy, Greece Olive Oil, Tunisia Economy, Tunisia Olive Oil, Morocco Economy, Morocco Olive Oil, Portugal Economy, Portugal Olive Oil, Olive Oil Production, Olive Oil Export, Olive Oil Import
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Most of the video Spain and Italy back and forth 😂

DanielsUKT
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Unfortunately Libya's Olive oil production market is mostly private and very badly taken care of, Italians played a large role into planting Olive trees in the colonization era "1910s-1040s"
There are still considerably a very large amount of trees all over the country specially the west side! But not as it should be...

Alhamidchannel
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This music makes it seem like war battle 🤣

PoliKr
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can anyone help me to get a dataset for this video please

karimarizqy
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Hi!
Which app do you use for creating such videos? Thanks)

ОльгаСтецюк-хъ
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It’s nice to see albania in their ;) 🇦🇱

kashi
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First olive tree farmed in history was in Syria

Criminalchannel
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Somehow, olive oil are not popular in Southeast Asia

bismarkarasakti
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Moroccan olive oil is the best because the quality of soil and more sun others country

lordoso
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does any one know olive oil make in europe, plz contact me, tks i need to make soap, i am from asia

武小芳-ji
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So, basically the Romen Empire produces the most Olives/Oil, makes sense.

sdb
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Love Morocco first place where aterian they introduced olive oil to the Mediterranean culture

Lol
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Palestine olive oil is very delicious🇵🇸❤️

didilov
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I don't think that Greece is more down than Turkey and Morocco.... And i dont think that Morocco is more up than Turkey but anyway...

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