Italy: Using satellite imagery, a project to map olive trees in Puglia, Italy, is under way. Each tree will be individually catalogued and form part of a database. Pugliaโs environmental official, Lorenzo Nicastro, said the census would cost EUR 250,000 and it would be a valuable tool for the agency tasked with protecting the trees, as well as granting or denying permission for the transplantation of trees.
Puglia is Italyโs greatest olive oil producing region, accounting for about 40 percent of the countryโs annual production of 550 thousand tons of olive oil. It is estimated that there are 60 million olive trees in Puglia and people like to say that is one for each of Italyโs 60 million people.
About six million of the trees are considered monumental trees and just under half a million trees are known as centuries-old trees.
In 2007 a law was introduced to protect monumental and ancient trees from transplantation and destruction. Photographs of time sculpted olives transplanted to the gardens of weekend villas belonging to Milanese businessmen (Berlusconi among them) galvanised support for olive tree protection in Puglia and led to the successful passage of the law. The 2007 law was set to expire at the end of this month, but it has been extended with some modifications.
Depressed prices for olive oil are tempting farmers to sell olive planted land to real estate developers or produce more lucrative crops. Italyโs high electricity costs, and government incentives, have made photovoltaic farms (solar panel fields) a very popular crop choice to replace olives.
Source:ย www.oliveoiltimes.com