Turkey investigates Italian company over alleged hazelnut monopoly


Ferrero sources hazelnuts for its world-famous Nutella spread and other products from Turkish farmers, who are angry over the company paying meagre sums for their produce. – EPA pic, November 16, 2022.

TURKEY has launched a legal investigation into Italian company Ferrero on charges of monopolising the hazelnut market, a local official said today.

Ferrero employs more than 1,000 people in Turkey, where it has been sourcing hazelnuts across the agriculture-rich country’s Black Sea regions for over three decades.

But the company, Turkey’s top hazelnut buyer, especially for its world-famous Nutella spread, has angered Turkish farmers.

They accuse Ferrero of paying meagre sums to them for hazelnuts and then selling its products at significantly higher prices.

“We started our legal process with the competition authority in September against Italian company Ferrero, which is trying to monopolise the hazelnut industry,” Hilmi Guler, mayor of the Black Sea province of Ordu, whose economy is mostly based on revenues from hazelnuts, tweeted.

“An investigation has been launched due to the company’s actions at all levels, from production to purchasing, shelling and export,” he said.

In an interview with daily Hurriyet in August, Guler vowed he would fight to protect Turkish farmers from exploitation.

“We cannot leave the hazelnut at the mercy of a few speculators. We are working to add a new dimension to this,” he said.

Last year, AFP reported from the Black Sea town of Akyazi, where farmers fumed at the Italian company.

In a statement to AFP at the time, Ferrero had said the company does not directly “own or manage farms in Turkey and does not source hazelnuts directly from farmers”.

It “procures the hazelnuts it needs for its products respecting free market regulations and based on market dynamics”.

Turkey is the world’s leading hazelnut producer, accounting for around 70% of the total world supply.

The global giant also produces Ferrero Rocher chocolates and Kinder chocolate eggs. – AFP, November 16, 2022.


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