Skip to main content

Lidl and Deoleo in Italy fined for ‘Deceitful’ sales of olive oil

Lidl and Deoleo have been fined by the Italian competition regulator for ‘deceitful’ sales of extra virgin olive oil in the country.

Lidl has been hit with a €550,000 fine for incorrectly labelling its Primadonna brand of extra virgin olive oil.  Meanwhile, Deoleo is facing a €300,000 fine after its Bertolli gentile, Sasso classic, and Carapelli il frantolio ‘extra virgin’ brands were found to be only ‘virgin’ olive oils.

The fines are related to an investigation launched in 2015, following an investigation by a local consumer magazine that found nine of the 20 most popular extra virgin olive oil brands to be falsely labelled.

The new fines are part of the stricter penalties that came into effect this month, which include manufacturers facing fines of up to €15,000 for each instance of incorrect or missing information (up from €2,500 previously).  The stricter fines follow a series of incidents around sales of mislabelled or fake olive oil across Europe.

Pin It

Related Articles

SPAR, the world’s largest food retail voluntary chain, has seen annual retail sales break the €40 billion mark for the first time, today reporting global sales revenue of €41.2 billion for the year ending December 31st, 2021. The figures represent...
Since the turn of the century and consistently for nearly a decade before the COVID-19 pandemic ravished global markets, Africa was home to the fastest growing economies. The shoots of positive growth it demonstrated afforded it the title of the “...
Last year’s Black Friday retail sales massively underperformed for many reasons, according to Marino Sigalas, Account Director at The MediaShop. He says that some consumers were not comfortable with the thought of being shoulder to shoulder with o...
Retailer Checkers says that customers using its Sixty60 home delivery service will now be able to benefit from its Xtra Savings rewards programme.
In the UK a government minister is calling for a new law to ban wet wipes that contain plastic. Labour minister Fleur Anderson argues that around 90% of the 11 billion wet wipes used in the UK per year contain some form of plastic that turns into ...