As of 2021, the most frequent type of adulteration of olive oil is that oil of lower quality is mixed into it. Adulterated oil is usually no more serious than passing off inferior, but safe, products as superior olive oil, however in 1981 almost 700 people died, it is believed, as a consequence of consuming
rapeseed (canola) oil adulterated with
aniline intended for use as an industrial lubricant, but sold as olive oil in Spain (see
toxic oil syndrome). In 1993, the FDA ordered a recall of Rubino U.S.A. Inc., (Cincinnati, Ohio) olive oils which were nothing more than
canola oil. In 1997, the
Canadian Food Inspection Agency began conducting tests on 100 oils claimed to be 100% olive oil and in 1999 the CFIA concluded that 20 per cent of the oils were fake. In 2007, NPR reported that with
Italian extra-virgin
olive oil in high demand with concomitant high prices, adulterated olive oil had become the biggest source of agricultural fraud problems in the
European Union. Some oil labeled "extra-virgin" is diluted with cheaper olive oils or other vegetable oils. In some cases,
lampante, or "lamp oil," which is made from spoiled olives fallen from trees, is used, even though it can't legally be sold as food. One fraud ring was accused of coloring low-grade
soy oil and
canola oil with industrial
chlorophyll, and flavoring it with
beta-carotene. In some cases,
colza oil with added color and flavor has been labeled and sold as olive oil. This extensive fraud prompted the Italian government to mandate a new labeling law in 2007 for companies selling olive oil, under which every bottle of Italian olive oil would have to declare the farm and press on which it was produced, as well as display a precise breakdown of the oils used, for blended oils. In February 2008, however, EU officials took issue with the new law, stating that under EU rules such labeling should be voluntary rather than compulsory. Under EU rules, olive oil may be sold as Italian even if it only contains a small amount of Italian oil. In April 2008, another operation impounded seven olive oil plants and arrested 40 people in nine provinces of northern and southern Italy for adding
chlorophyll to
sunflower and
soybean oil and selling it as extra virgin olive oil, both in Italy and abroad. 25,000 liters of the fake oil were seized and prevented from being exported. In December 2008, the
Guardia Civil in
La Rioja (Spain) warned about the possible sale of adulterated olive oil in the area. This warning came after 550 litres of oil was found in a large container labelled "Astispumante 1510" in
Rincón de Soto and after the theft of 1,750 litres of oil was reported in the area on December 18, 2008. In the first week of March 2010, researchers at the
University of California at Davis' Olive Center purchased three bottles each of 14 imported olive oils and five California oils at retail stores in three different regions of California (
Sacramento County,
San Francisco Bay Area and
Los Angeles County). All of the oils were labeled "extra-virgin olive oil." Samples were shipped to the Australian Oils Research Laboratory in
Wagga Wagga, and were analyzed by their laboratory (which is recognized by the IOC to provide chemical analysis of olive oil) and tested by their sensory panel (which is recognized by the IOC as qualified to perform olive oil sensory analysis). Duplicate testing was performed at the UC Davis olive oil research project laboratories. Sixty-nine percent of the imported olive oils and 10% of the California oils failed to meet the IOC/USDA taste standards for extra-virgin olive oil. Samples that failed had a median of up to 3.5 IOC-standardized sensory defects (such as rancid, fusty, and musty). The standard IOC/USDA chemical tests only identified 31% of the failed oils as defective, primarily by exceeding the IOC/USDA limit for ultraviolet absorbance of late oxidation products (K232 and K268); two more recently introduced German chemical tests (now incorporated into the Australian extra-virgin standard) were each more than twice as effective at detection of defective oils. A subsequent round of testing in 2011 found similar results. The UC Davis report was contested by the North American Olive Oil Association on the grounds that UC Davis has a conflict of interest due to the fact that they market their own olive oil and have an interest in promoting olive oil from California. The IOC stated that the study contained "[an] evident undercurrent of aggressive, inexplicable criticism of imported olive oil quality". In March 2011, the Florence, Italy, prosecutor's office, working in conjunction with the forestry department, indicted two managers and an officer of Carapelli, one of the brands of the Spanish company Grupo SOS (which recently changed its name to Deoleo) and Pietro Coricelli. The charges involved falsified documents and food fraud. Carapelli lawyer Neri Pinucci said the company was not worried about the charges and that "the case is based on an irregularity in the documents". However, in June 2017 the Italian Antitrust Authority (Autorità Garante della Concorrenza e del Mercato), found them guilty of unfair business practices regarding their olive oil brands and imposed fines on them and the discount supermarket chain Lidl, amounting to nearly €1 million. In 2012,
The Advertiser wrote that while only less than 10% of world olive oil production met the criteria for labeling as extra-virgin, it had been estimated that up to 50% of retail oil is labeled "extra-virgin". Tests by the Australian Olive Association (AOA) in 2012 showed that every imported brand of extra-virgin olive oil fell below the standard that would be required for AOA certification. The AOA has been campaigning to have the
Australian Competition & Consumer Commission force supermarkets to adhere to the code.
Standards Australia has adopted a code of practice for the testing of olive oils; however, while allowing oils to be certified as being genuine extra-virgin, the code regarding labeling is voluntary. In June 2017, the
Olive Oil Times published, that according to independent testing, oil from the brands Bertolli, Carapelli, Coricelli, Primadonna, and Sasso labelled as "extra virgin" was in fact only "virgin". In December 2023, it was reported that the
Spanish Civil Guard and the Italian
Carabinieri together with
Europol had arrested 11 people, who adulterated more than 260,000 liters, or roughly 68,000 gallons, of olive oil with lampante oil in november in
Sicily,
Tuscany and
Ciudad Real in Spain. See
Olive oil raids of 2023 in Europe for more. ==See also==