What's truly Italian?
Food fight foils 'Made in Italy' plan
Send a link to a friend
[June 02, 2017]
By Francesca Landini
MILAN
(Reuters) - For the Italian government, it seemed like a recipe for
success: create an official "Made in Italy" logo to defend the country's
finest food exports from an army of foreign impersonators.
On supermarket shelves worldwide, a star-shaped logo would mark out real
Italian cheeses, hams, pasta and sparkling wines from those that only
look or sound Italian, such as Parmesan made in New Zealand or Prosecco
bottled in Brazil.
But Rome has discovered that even the simplest recipe can go wrong.
Instead of unifying Italy's food industry against a common enemy that is
bagging billions of euros in sales, the government's proposal for a Made
in Italy certification quickly created bitter divisions.
A row has erupted over what it means to be truly Italian - should every
single raw ingredient be made in Italy, for example - and now the
project could be ditched altogether for lack of an industry consensus,
according to two industry ministry sources who declined to be named as
talks with food firms are ongoing.
"For now there is no final decision on whether to go ahead with the Made
in Italy sign, we are studying it, we are doing technical checks," said
one of the sources, an industry ministry official who is working on the
project.
"We will launch it only if it fully meets the requests of producers," he
said, adding that the food industry was split into several groups with
conflicting views on the project.
The ministry announced the project at the end of last year, and began
consultations with food producers in March, in response to industry
complaints that foreign-made foods masquerading as Italian produce were
costing the country billions of euros in lost export sales.
A logo guaranteeing Italian origin would enable exporters to grab some
of the roughly 60 billion euros ($67 billion) in annual global sales
generated by foreign imitations, according to Italy's food producers'
lobby, Federalimentare.
Marketing experts agree. Brand Finance, a global consultancy that
compiles an index of the world's most valuable brands, estimates it
could add up to 5 percent to the enterprise value of small and
medium-sized Italian food companies.
"Domestic companies would surely gain from such a logo given that Italy
has a high reputation in the food sector and many of them are not well
known outside the country," said Massimo Pizzo, Italy managing director
for Brand Finance.
However, Federalimentare's members could not agree on a definition of
Italian-made. Some took a hard line, insisting products be made entirely
in Italy from ingredients sourced at home, while others argued for a
less stringent approach.
'IF WE OPEN THE DOOR..'
The consortium of producers of Parmigiano Reggiano, the king of Italian
cheeses, insists on rigid standards for everyone.
"If we open the door to products with foreign ingredients, we are not
talking of real Made in Italy ... this is not the kind of help we are
looking for," said Riccardo Deserti, chairman of the consortium.
Under the consortium's rules, recognised across the European Union,
cheese can only be marketed as Parmigiano Reggiano, or by its English
name Parmesan, if it is made according to a precise method within a
restricted area around the town of Parma.
The consortium of Prosecco wine producers takes a similar stance,
rejecting the idea of being put in the same authenticity category as
products made with foreign raw materials.
On the other hand, some firms believe traditional Italian production
methods should be enough to qualify for the logo.
Barilla, the world's biggest pasta maker, wants to carry the Made in
Italy logo though 16 of its 30 plants are abroad, including in the
United States and Russia.
[to top of second column] |
Cheese makers prepare
curds for Parmesan cheese at 4 Madonne Caseificio dell'Emilia dairy
cooperative in Modena, Italy, February 16, 2016. REUTERS/Alessandro
Bianchi/File Photo
"We
are Italian, we pay taxes in Italy and we run our foreign plants following the
rules of the Italian quality," Paolo Barilla, vice chairman of the family-owned
business, told a food conference in March. A Barilla spokesman declined to make
any further comment for this story.
One of
Italy's most identifiable food brands, the high-end food chain Eataly, draws a
finer line on the issue.
It recently opened its first store in Moscow where an embargo on some European
food imports forced it to make some cheeses from local ingredients. It sells
mozzarella and burrata made in Russia, but not Parmigiano.
"I totally agree with the idea of a Made in Italy sign," Eataly founder Oscar
Farinetti told Reuters at the inauguration of the store, but did not say whether
he sided with the Italian-made purists or the likes of Barilla.
OLIVE AND OAK
Italian food producers can at least agree on one thing: that foreign rivals are
competing unfairly by marketing distinctly Italian products, using words and
symbols that suggest an Italian origin but listing the real provenance in fine
print.
They
point the finger at goods such as New Zealand dairy giant Fonterra's <FCG.NZ>
Perfect Italiano range of Parmesan and Mozzarella cheeses or Garibaldi Prosecco
made in Brazil by the Garibaldi Winery Cooperative.
Contacted by Reuters, a Fonterra spokesperson said the group markets the two
cheeses using their Italian names and featuring the Italian flag because they
were launched by Natale Italiano, an Italian who migrated to Australia in the
1920s.
"While the brand is proud of its heritage, its packaging is evolving away from
featuring the Italian flag," Fonterra said.
The group did not disclose the turnover of the Perfect Italiano products.
Garibaldi Winery did not respond to emailed requests for comment.
The Rome government had proposed a Made in Italy logo employing the symbols of
the Italian republic: a star framed by olive and oak branches.
The
project was, however, constrained by EU rules.
The government planned to include products if their last "significant
transformation" happened in Italy, the ministry official said - meaning, for
example, sausages produced in Italy using imported meat would qualify for the
label while ham made in a foreign plant of an Italian producer would not.
This would bring the logo into line with the European Customs Code governing
country-of-origin labeling, but the plan satisfied neither side in the food
fight; the purists balked at the idea of foreign ingredients being allowed,
while other firms argued the rules were too stringent.
Hence the impasse that threatens the project.
"Even if we wanted to, we couldn't use a different standard from the one used in
Europe," said the source.
(Additional reporting by Maria Kiselyova in MOSCOW and Ana Nicolaci da Costa in
WELLINGTON; Editing by Mark Bendeich and Pravin Char)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |