Source: ESAO image bank.
In the management of a modern olive oil mill, every detail matters. One of the key factors influencing competitiveness is energy efficiency in your olive oil mill. This is not only about reducing costs: it is about sustainability, brand positioning, and the ability to compete internationally. Improving energy efficiency in your olive oil mill is essential to boosting olive oil mill profitability and strengthening long-term business growth.
Energy consumption represents between 10% and 20% of an olive oil mill’s operating costs. Without a clear strategy, that percentage can grow uncontrollably, directly affecting olive oil mill profitability and drastically reducing margins.
Below, we analyze the key actions to improve energy efficiency in your olive oil mill and, as a result, increase profits.
If you are interested in learning how other mills have successfully increased efficiency and profitability, you can explore: Profitability and modernization of olive oil mills: success stories
The most common mistake is not knowing exactly where energy is being consumed. Without measurement, there is no management.
Recommendations:
With this data, you will be able to identify unnecessary energy consumption and start optimizing processes in the olive oil mill.
Malaxation is one of the most energy-intensive processes. Excessively high temperatures or extended processing times increase electricity consumption and negatively impact the oil’s sensory quality.
Best practices:
The benefit is twofold: energy savings and improved EVOO quality.
Source: ESAO image bank.
In many olive oil mills, heat generated by machinery is simply lost. With small technical adjustments, this heat can be reused to reduce energy consumption.
Although it requires initial investment, the return is usually fast and further strengthens energy efficiency in your olive oil mill.
Many mills still operate with outdated lighting systems or inefficient motors.
Small measures that can generate up to a 15% annual energy saving while improving competitiveness.
Energy efficiency in your olive oil mill depends not only on machinery but also on people. If operators are not aware and engaged, investments lose effectiveness.
Small cultural changes can generate significant improvements in olive oil mill profitability.
Energy efficiency in your olive oil mill is not an isolated objective but part of a broader strategy to make the mill more profitable, competitive, and sustainable.
Reducing consumption, optimizing processes, and training staff are essential steps. However, isolated measures are not enough — a comprehensive approach connecting efficiency, quality, and profitability is required.
This post provides a practical introduction, but it does not replace comprehensive and rigorous training. In the ESAO Executive MBA – Olive Oil Business Consultancy , energy efficiency is studied as part of a global professionalization plan, from technical management to commercial and export strategy.
If you want to transform your olive oil mill into a profitable and internationally competitive business, advanced training is the path forward.