How old is the California olive industry?
Commercial olive farming in California began in the late 1800s, primarily in the valleys of Central and Northern California. Those early olive crops went into olive-oil production but, in the early 1900s, the industry shifted, as canning technology resulted in higher returns for table olives than for oil. Today, 90 percent of California’s olive production is for canned olives, with only 10 percent crushed for oil. This is just the opposite of Spain, the world’s leading olive producer, which grows 90 percent of its olive crop for oil and only 10 percent for cured olive products. How big is the California olive industry? California is the only state in the nation producing a commercially significant crop of olives. Approximately 70 to 80 percent of the ripe olives consumed in the United States come from California. While the olive is an important specialty crop for California, the state’s olive industry is dwarfed by that of Spain. For example, a 2002 Census of Agriculture indicated that
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