Knowledge Agora



Similar Articles

Title Patterns of specialisation by country and sector in olive applications
ID_Doc 14075
Authors Torrecillas, C; Martínez, C
Title Patterns of specialisation by country and sector in olive applications
Year 2022
Published
Abstract Natural resource endowments can determine a country's specialisation and provide it with an advantaged position in international networks, but they can also lock it into low value-added activities in global value chains. Favourable weather and soil conditions have made olive trees one of the most recognisable characteristics of the Mediterranean landscape for thousands of years. Olive oil and foods using olive related products are traditionally associated with the Mediterranean lifestyle and healthy nutrition habits, but are Mediterranean countries using their natural advantage for upgrading in global value chains? Are there other uses of olives outside the agrofood sector offering new opportunities in other sectors for countries with olive hectares? The aim of this paper is to present an analysis of country specialisation patterns across different sectors using olive applications. We compare the number of planted hectares of olive crops across countries with their revealed comparative advantages in terms of olive products exports and with their revealed technological advantages in terms of olive related patent applications. Our analysis shows that there is great heterogeneity across olive producing countries. We observe that the top countries, Spain and Italy, have both commercial and technological advantages for all the olive uses considered (food, health, cosmetic and waste applications), but only find a statistical association between natural, commercial, and technological advantages across for agrofood uses. We also observe that, regardless of the existence or not of natural advantages, demand opportunities associated to healthier lifestyles are leading some countries to specialise in health, nutrition, and cosmetic uses of olives. Moreover, circular economy and climate change policies are also fostering new uses of by-products of waste applications from olive oil production.
PDF

Similar Articles

ID Score Article
20737 Donner, M; Erraach, Y; Lopez-i-Gelats, F; Manuel-i-Martin, J; Yatribi, T; Radic, I; El Hadad-Gauthier, F Circular bioeconomy for olive oil waste and by-product valorisation: Actors' strategies and conditions in the Mediterranean area(2022)
64098 Martín-García, J; Gómez-Limón, JA; Arriaza, M Conventional versus organic olive farming: which has a better economic performance?(2023)Agricultural And Food Economics, 11, 1
27354 D'Adamo, I; Falcone, PM; Gastaldi, M; Morone, P A Social Analysis of the Olive Oil Sector: The Role of Family Business(2019)Resources-Basel, 8.0, 3
13505 Enaime, G; Dababat, S; Wichern, M; Lübken, M Olive mill wastes: from wastes to resources(2024)
9744 Blanco, I; De Bellis, L; Luvisi, A Bibliometric Mapping of Research on Life Cycle Assessment of Olive Oil Supply Chain(2022)Sustainability, 14.0, 7
Scroll