At a field outside Kozani, northern Greece, the strikingly blue-and-purple petals of saffron give off an intoxicating scent that underscores the value of one of the country’s most lucrative crops.
But beneath the beautiful flowers, which can fetch five to nine euros ($5.45-9.8) for a single gram, the earth is cracked and parched after uncommonly long periods of drought, taking a toll on the crop’s yield.
“We haven’t had a good dose of rain in our area since May,” sighed veteran saffron farmer Grigoris Tzidimopoulos.
After the warmest winter and summer since detailed records began in 1960, Greece has now experienced its driest month of October in the last 15 years, according to the national observatory.
“This field used to give us more than a pound (454 grams) per acre. Last year… from nine acres in all, the yield was three pounds,” 68-year-old Tzidimopoulos said.
“Ten or 12 years ago when I sowed, it often snowed. Now we have neither snow nor rain,” he added.
Ancient tradition
Harvested in Greece for at least 3,600 years—a saffron picker is even immortalized in a Minoan-era fresco—the spice is commonly used to flavor rice, chicken and fish but can also be found in cosmetics and pharmaceuticals.
At the local village of Krokos and in about 20 other neighboring villages in Kozani, the inhabitants have systematically cultivated saffron since the 17th century.
Around 1,000 farmers live from the crop in the area and are intimately familiar with the microclimate that the plant requires order to perform better.
About 5,200 hectares of land (12,800 acres) cultivated here produce the largest quantity of saffron in Europe.
The local Krokos Kozani variety, also known as Greek saffron, enjoys protected designation status at European Union level.
Seventy percent of the product is exported to over 20 countries, with the largest markets being Switzerland and the United States.
And the regional cooperative, set up in 1971, has the exclusive right to collect, package and distribute the product.
Sissy Ioana, 40, has been working the fields for over 10 years and knows from experience whether the upcoming harvest will be a good one.
“Every year the crop is worse,” she said, holding up a freshly cut flower to show the red or orange threads that, once dried, make saffron.
Thinner than hair
“The flower is not very big. Other years it’s three times as big. When you dry it out it will be thinner than hair,” she told AFP.
According to local growers, it takes about 50,000 of these red specks to produce 100 grams of Greek saffron.
The cultivation is particularly labor-intensive as the harvesting to packaging process is all done by hand.
In the 1980s, according to the cooperative, total saffron production in the area was as high as 12 tonnes. Last year it was just over one tonne.
“The annual quantities produced have been decreasing every year,” said the cooperative’s president, Vassilis Mitsiopoulos.
In 2017, the cooperative produced of 3.8 tonnes of saffron, while last year they barely reached 1.1 tonnes with the same acreage, he said.
“The climate is getting warmer. The rains are erratic through the year and at the wrong time. Snowfall is, I would say, non-existent now.”
“All this has resulted in a reduced yield of Kozani saffron,” he said.
Climate conditions have changed so dramatically over the last 20 years that olive trees now flourish in Kozani, something unthinkable previously, Mitsiopoulos said.
“If the (saffron) yield continues to be so low I imagine that producers will abandon it or be forced to try to relocate to more northern areas,” he said.
© 2024 AFP
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Cracked earth in Greece’s saffron heartland as drought takes toll (2024, November 8)
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