Sustainability Labels on Olive Oil: A Review on Consumer Attitudes and Behavior
Abstract
:1. Introduction
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- How consumers perceive the sustainability labels on olive oil?
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- How the use of sustainability labels (separately or together) impact consumers’ preferences and willingness to pay for olive oil.
2. Background: Sustainability Labeling on Food Products
3. Methodology and Materials
3.1. Study Selection
- Population—independent consumers and/or purchasers of olive oil aged 18–75 years old.
- Intervention—labels/logos/claims/information linked to economic, environmental and/or social or cultural sustainability of olive oil.
- Comparison—consumer preference for the different sustainability labels.
- Outcomes—qualitative results included consumer evaluation, interpretation and liking of different labels. Empirical results included attribute utility estimates and willingness-to-pay.
- Situation—no geographical limits.
- Type of study—primary research studies only.
3.2. Overview of the Publications
3.3. Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews (PRISMA)
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- The paper presents a result of an empirical study (literature reviews are excluded);
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- The objective of the study deals with aspects related to consumer attitudes and behavior (perception, preferences, buying and consuming habits, etc.).
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- The empirical work is a consumer study (studies with farmers, manufacturers, experts are not considered);
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- At least one olive oil sustainability label is studied;
4. Results
4.1. Consumer Attitudes and Behavior Regarding Origin-Based Labeling on Olive Oil
4.1.1. Country-of-Origin Labeling (COOL)
4.1.2. Region of Origin’ Labeling
4.1.3. Consumers Attitudes and Behavior Regarding ‘Local’ Labeling on Olive Oil
4.2. Consumers Attitudes and Behavior Regarding Environmental Sustainability Labels on Olive Oil
4.3. Consumers Attitudes and Behavior Regarding Social and Cultural Sustainability Labeling on Olive Oil
4.4. Competition or Complementarities between Sustainability Labels on Olive Oil
5. Discussion
5.1. Summary of the Key Findings
5.2. Consumer Preferences towards Sustainability Labels in the Context of Olive Oil
5.3. Perspectives for Future Research
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- Synergies and oppositions between different sustainability labels
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- Consumer perceptions of geographical indications transition towards the inclusion of environmental aspects
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- Cross-cultural analysis including different territorial context, for olive oil particularly including North/South Mediterranean and producer/non-producer countries
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- Consumer behavior in the context of circular economy agenda, acceptance of products issued from waste and by-products
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Category | Sub-Category | Denominations | Definition | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Origin-based labeling (economic, social sustainability dimension) | Country | ‘Country of origin’, ‘origin’, ‘place of origin’ or ‘place of provenance’ | The country where the product comes from | |
Region | Certified label | Protected Designation of Origin “PDO” | Identifies a product that originates from a particular place, region or country, the quality or characteristics of which are mainly due to a particular geographical environment with its inherent natural factors (raw materials, environmental conditions, location) and human factors (traditional and craft production) and the production, transformation and elaboration stages of which all take place with inside the described geographical area, in respect of consistent production regulations established in the procedural guidelines of production | |
Protected Geographical Indication “PGI” | Indicates a product that originates from a particular place, region or country, whose given quality and characteristics are basically related to its geographical origin, and for which at least one of the production steps takes place with inside the described geographical area | |||
Not certified label | The name of region of origin | It consists on indicating the region where product was made it. | ||
Local | ‘Farm to fork’, ‘short supply chain’, ‘traditional product’ | A variable geographical indication that depends on the consumer perception of the term ‘local’, it can be a country, a region, a village. | ||
Environmental sustainability | Eco-label | Environmental labels | A quality label indicating that the product was produced with less harmful effects on the environment. | |
Organic agriculture | Organic farming, organic production, Bio | A production system that follows specific regulations to guarantee the sustainability of the soil, ecosystem and human. | ||
Social and cultural sustainability | Fair-trade | A certification system that guarantees social sustainability (restrict child labor, guaranteeing a safe workplace and the right to unionize), economic sustainability (fair price that covers the cost of production and facilitates social development, and environmental sustainability (conservation of the environment). |
Number of Databases | Language | Database |
---|---|---|
8 | English | AgEcon, Web of science, EconPapers, NAL Catalog, Google Scholar, Emerald insight, Taylor and Francis online, Science Direct |
Authors | Country | Region | Purpose of the Studies | Type of Label or Sustainability Aspect | The Aspect Studied | Methods Used in the Studies | Sample Size | Main Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Finardi et al. (2009) | Italy | Not specified | Analyze the introduction of country-of-origin labeling and new health claims | Local product | consumer preferences | Focus group, Questionnaire, choice experiment | 196 | The attribute related to the Italian origin carried the highest parameter relative to the other attributes, health claim and acidity level information. |
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Erraach, Y.; Jaafer, F.; Radić, I.; Donner, M. Sustainability Labels on Olive Oil: A Review on Consumer Attitudes and Behavior. Sustainability 2021, 13, 12310. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132112310
Erraach Y, Jaafer F, Radić I, Donner M. Sustainability Labels on Olive Oil: A Review on Consumer Attitudes and Behavior. Sustainability. 2021; 13(21):12310. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132112310
Chicago/Turabian StyleErraach, Yamna, Fatma Jaafer, Ivana Radić, and Mechthild Donner. 2021. "Sustainability Labels on Olive Oil: A Review on Consumer Attitudes and Behavior" Sustainability 13, no. 21: 12310. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132112310
APA StyleErraach, Y., Jaafer, F., Radić, I., & Donner, M. (2021). Sustainability Labels on Olive Oil: A Review on Consumer Attitudes and Behavior. Sustainability, 13(21), 12310. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132112310