
Siblings Marie-Charlotte Piro and Romain Piro stand amongst a number of the olive bushes they harvest in Tuscany, Italy, to create their olive oil. Their Olio Piro startup had been exporting all its olive oil to america — till new U.S. tariffs moved up their plans to start out increasing elsewhere.
Vikki Colvin
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Vikki Colvin
SEGGIANO, Italy — On the steep hills of southern Tuscany, Romain Piro has spent the previous twenty years harvesting fruit from his silvery olive bushes and turning it into olive oil.
In 2019, he satisfied his sister, Marie-Charlotte Piro, to enter enterprise with him. The siblings began delivery their small-batch bottles to america, the place olive oil is in excessive demand — however the place little or no is made. Individuals devour nearly 400,000 tons of olive oil yearly, greater than every other nation besides Italy, and import some 95% of it.
“One could be loopy to not export to the U.S., as a result of it is an incredible market,” Romain Piro says. “And I hope it may keep this fashion.”
At first, Olio Piro discovered success in america — racking up gross sales, business awards and high-profile followers at Michelin-starred eating places. However now, it is trying elsewhere for progress, because of President Trump’s new tariffs on nearly every thing america imports, together with olive oil. For months, the Piro siblings have watched Trump threaten after which retreat from potential taxes as excessive as 30%, earlier than asserting a take care of the European Union final week to seemingly finalize tariffs at 15%.
Particulars are nonetheless being hammered out. The European Union remains to be hoping to barter some exemptions for wine and different agricultural merchandise, and a few olive oil business members inform NPR they have not given up on the potential for a reprieve. And 15% is healthier than the worst-case state of affairs — but it surely’s nonetheless a steep new tax for European olive oil producers, who’ve spent the previous few years fighting excessive warmth and poor harvests.
For startups like Olio Piro, which has restricted sources and skill to face up to monetary shocks, surviving this 12 months’s commerce chaos has meant searching for extra secure buying and selling companions. In order Trump took workplace early this 12 months, the Piro siblings moved up their plans to start out exporting to different nations, together with Canada, Japan and Germany.
“We had been at all times planning to be world, however we weren’t planning to go world that quick,” Marie-Charlotte Piro says. “The uncertainty was actually troublesome to deal with.”
The USA depends on overseas (olive) oil
As soon as a specialty ingredient, olive oil has change into an important meals supply for Individuals. However america would not — and may’t — make a lot of the olive oil it needs. Home farmers and producers, largely in California, provide solely 5% of the olive oil Individuals purchase. Every thing else is imported, largely from Spain and Italy.
“We’re woefully depending on overseas oil,” says Joseph R. Profaci, govt director of the North American Olive Oil Affiliation, a commerce group representing each home and worldwide producers, together with Olio Piro.
A few of Olio Piro’s olive tree groves in southern Tuscany. The six-year-old Italian startup is certainly one of many European exporters to america, the place olive oil is in excessive demand however the place little or no is made and 95% is imported.
Maria Aspan
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Maria Aspan
This dependency has created alternatives for entrepreneurs just like the Piro siblings, who grew up in France earlier than beginning down two very totally different paths. Romain is the dreamer: He adopted a Buddhist monk to Tuscany, the place — whereas finding out and volunteering on the native Buddhist cultural heart — he began farming as a day job. When he started making olive oil, he offered it by loading up the again of his Volkswagen van, “driving to Paris, knocking on the again door of Michelin-starred eating places and promoting the olive oil within the alley,” his sister remembers. “The cooks cherished it — but it surely was not a scalable enterprise.”
In the meantime, Marie-Charlotte had moved to Miami and jumped into its actual property increase. “I had been promoting overpriced condos for 20 years — and did extraordinarily nicely,” she laughs. When Romain lastly satisfied her to group up, “I used to be very assured that I may do the identical with a really high-quality olive oil — that was not overpriced however that was costlier than the opposite ones round them.”
Certainly, Olio Piro sells a half-liter bottle of olive oil for $56 — a value that analysts name “superpremium” and that even Marie-Charlotte acknowledges is increased than she would love. She blames a few of that on Olio Piro’s up-front prices as a quality-focused small producer: It harvests olives solely by hand, and it makes use of a contemporary kind of milling know-how that may be costlier than what most olive oil producers use.

A few of these unit prices will come down as Olio Piro scales up. And with gross sales rising, Marie-Charlotte had thought this 12 months could be the time.
“We have been ready for this second, to have the ability to decrease our costs, for 3 years,” she says. “Promoting a $56 bottle of olive oil is absolutely laborious.”
However the tariffs have modified her plans. And she or he’s not alone: Even the world’s largest olive oil producer is bracing for tariff chaos. Spain’s Deoleo, the proprietor of manufacturers together with Bertolli, depends on the U.S. for greater than 1 / 4 of its gross sales. Its CEO not too long ago advised CNBC.com that Trump’s tariffs would in the end elevate costs for U.S. shoppers. (The corporate didn’t reply to an NPR request for remark.)
But because the tariffs roil European olive oil producers, their U.S. rivals cannot reap many advantages. Trump has mentioned that his new taxes will encourage extra home manufacturing and thus create extra U.S. jobs. However as with avocados or espresso beans, olive oil business members and analysts say home farmers simply cannot develop sufficient olives to fulfill U.S. demand.
Olive bushes require California-like climates, which few different U.S. states share. And even when California farmers began planting extra olive bushes this 12 months, these bushes would not begin producing olives for a number of years.
“Olive oil has change into important to the American kitchen — and it is also one thing that you simply simply cannot actually get wherever close to to satisfying demand for domestically,” says Randy Burt, a client merchandise analyst for AlixPartners.

He predicts that Trump’s new tariffs will probably end in increased costs for U.S. shoppers. If that occurs, he expects some buyers to modify to cheaper alternate options.
“Personally, I do not assume any of them are nearly as good as olive oil,” Burt says. “However that is what occurs when costs tick up.”

A employee restocks Italian olive oil at Claro’s Italian Market in Arcadia, California. Italy exports billions of {dollars} in meals merchandise, together with olive oil, and wine to america. Now President Trump’s new tariffs are including prices and issues for Italian olive oil producers, together with Olio Piro, and their prospects.
Mario Tama/Getty Photos
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Mario Tama/Getty Photos
Individuals on tight budgets are almost definitely to modify to vegetable oils, like sunflower or canola oil. These are also referred to as “seed oils” — which have been criticized as unhealthy by Trump’s well being secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (Many vitamin and science researchers have advised NPR that whereas seed oils is probably not as wholesome as olive oil, the claims that they are dangerous to well being are overblown.)
The North American Olive Oil Affiliation has tried to enchantment to the Trump administration and Kennedy’s “Make America Wholesome Once more” agenda. This spring, the group met with lawmakers and held an occasion in Washington highlighting olive oil’s well being advantages and its insufficient home manufacturing, arguing that lawmakers ought to exempt olive oil from the tariffs.
The efforts haven’t yielded any obvious outcomes, however Profaci, the commerce group’s director, hasn’t given up hope. Because the European Union makes an attempt to barter tariff exemptions for agricultural merchandise that america doesn’t produce a lot of, Profaci plans to proceed advocating for olive oil: “We in fact assume it makes good sense to guard American shoppers, particularly for wholesome merchandise,” he mentioned in an e-mail after the commerce deal.
Spokespeople for the White Home and america commerce consultant didn’t reply to requests for remark.
A sport plan that expands past the U.S.
It might be months earlier than U.S. shoppers begin seeing the total influence of a 15% tariff hit their European olive oil costs. As with so many different merchandise, some corporations are prone to attempt to eat a number of the prices, at the very least initially. And a few giant producers may have rushed to ship extra bottles earlier than the upper tariffs went into impact — though as a perishable good, olive oil cannot be stockpiled indefinitely.
However these coping methods are extra out of attain for small companies like Olio Piro, which had $500,000 in gross sales final 12 months — and which does not have the monetary cushion that its greatest rivals do.
So early this 12 months, Olio Piro began pivoting. Marie-Charlotte introduced on an export supervisor and extra workers to analysis its new markets and begin dealing with logistics — every thing from translating web sites to determining which native commerce reveals they need to attend. She’s additionally elevating cash from traders and planning to take a position 150,000 euros in Piro’s world growth this 12 months.
“It is a pretty big course of … and for us, it is a very giant quantity,” she says.
In the meantime, the White Home has but to supply a lot element on its commerce settlement with the European Union — that means that the Piro siblings, in addition to their complete business, are nonetheless dealing with some uncertainty.
It is affecting producers in several methods. Bigger olive oil producers are inclined to retailer their olive oil after the autumn harvest after which ship all year long, that means that many have needed to navigate the altering U.S. tariff charges on a day by day or weekly foundation.
However at the very least on this case, being small has labored to Olio Piro’s benefit. Its subsequent olive harvest would not begin till October, after which it must bottle the oil. Then Piro will ship its new harvest suddenly, early subsequent 12 months — that means that its founders have a little bit extra time for the small print of the EU’s commerce deal to shake out.
So Marie-Charlotte Piro can wait till January to determine how a lot olive oil she’s going to ship to america — and the way a lot she’ll ship to new prospects elsewhere, like in Canada.
“Once we are able to get on the boat, that is when we’re going to resolve,” she says. “The selection can be made in accordance with the extent of the tariffs.”