logo
Austria trials DNA testing to uncover honey fraud

Austria trials DNA testing to uncover honey fraud

France 2427-04-2025
With fake honey flooding markets, and only a few European laboratories running such analysis, the small Austrian company Sinsoma began offering the tests two years ago.
"It is really something new for the honey market," said Corinna Wallinger, head of sales at Sinsoma.
It is essential that technology "always moves forward -- just as the counterfeiters" do, she added.
Honey cannot have ingredients such as water or inexpensive sugar syrups -- which might boost its volume -- added to it, according to EU legislation.
But tests have shown that is common practice.
Between 2021 and 2022, 46 percent of the honey tested under an EU investigation as it entered the bloc was flagged as potentially adulterated, up from 14 percent in the 2015-17 period.
Of the suspicious consignments, 74 percent were of Chinese origin.
Beekeepers' livelihoods threatened
Seeking to better detect fraud, Austria's health and food safety agency (AGES) used DNA testing for the first time this year and is still evaluating the results.
European supermarket chain SPAR also ordered DNA tests for its honey.
The chain put its honeys -- taken off the shelves late last year in Austria for testing -- back after they passed DNA tests and another analysis.
Besides cheating consumers, fake honey threatens the livelihood of beekeepers, who struggle to compete with the far lower prices of imported honey -- often blended from various countries -- and are demanding more effective testing.
"We don't have a chance at all," said Matthias Kopetzky, owner of the Wiener Bezirksimkerei, which takes care of up to 350 hives in Vienna, as bees buzzed around him on a meadow overlooking the capital.
While the European Union is the world's top honey producer after China, it is also the second-biggest importer after the United States.
Most of the bloc's honey imports come from Ukraine, China and Argentina, according to EU data.
An EU directive adopted last year stipulates that honey labels from mid-2026 must detail the countries of origin, as opposed to merely referencing a "blend of EU and non-EU honeys".
Beekeepers like Kopetzky hope the new rule will raise consumer awareness.
Brussels also set up a group of experts, with a mandate until 2028, to "harmonise methods to detect adulteration in honey and trace the product back to the harvesting producer or importer".
Rigorous process
Austria's Sinsoma has specialised in DNA testing.
"Honey is full of DNA traces, of information from the environment where bees collected the nectar. Every honey has a unique DNA profile," Wallinger said.
When a honey sample lacks a wide range of DNA traces or for example contains a high proportion of DNA traces from rice or corn -- which bees do not frequent -- this indicates a honey is not genuine, she added.
Co-founded by Wallinger in 2018, Sinsoma now employs about a dozen people working in the small laboratory room and adjacent open office space in the quiet town of Voels near Innsbruck.
Sinsoma charges beekeepers 94 euros ($103) for a basic DNA test targeting plants -- about half of what a classic pollen test would normally cost, she said.
For the DNA profile, beekeepers also get a QR code which allows consumers to see exactly which plant species the bees making the honey have frequented, she said.
Experts warn the DNA method can detect certain types of fraud but not all, and that a rigorous process of validation is required to ensure trustworthy results.
Wallinger recognised the need for standardisation of the methods but said this will take time.
"It is always somewhat of an issue -- and this is also the case at the EU level," she said.
© 2025 AFP
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bored of your beach read? Dive into these politicians' steamy novels
Bored of your beach read? Dive into these politicians' steamy novels

Euronews

time4 hours ago

  • Euronews

Bored of your beach read? Dive into these politicians' steamy novels

They say that inspiration comes from the most unexpected places. But who would have thought that a public office setting could inspire romantic – and oftentimes dark and even forbidden- erotic fantasies? Those politicians from Spain, France, Austria or the UK used their own experience and put on paper their romantic or sexual life. Here are their stories. Think of this not as a reading list, but as a peek into a rather unexpected literary niche. Thomas Oberreiter, Austrian Ambassador to the European Union (2023-2025) At the end of July, a story made jaws drop in Brussels: Austria's representative to the EU institutions was accused of running a blog with highly explicit content. Written from a female perspective, the blog includes scenes depicting sadomasochistic encounters – and at times, descriptions of non-consensual sex – allegedly authored by the 59-year-old male diplomat. Despite Oberreiter denying any involvement in the blog, media investigations traced its posts to IP addresses and devices belonging to the Austrian Foreign Ministry. The blog was reportedly updated during working hours and from within official premises. After more than 30 years as a diplomat in Europe and Mexico, Oberreiter resigned as the controversy erupted in Brussels. He has not responded to requests for comment. Quote to remember (or you wish you could forget): 'We were meat, nothing more. Women. Vessels for men's semen.' Marlene Schiappa, in the French government from 2017 to 2023. Secretary of State for Gender Equality (2017-2020), Minister Delegate in charge of Citizenship (2020-2022) & State Secretary for the Social and Solidarity Economy (2022-2023) Long before entering ministerial office, Marlène Schiappa had already turned to erotic writing under the pen name Marie Minelli. Among her titles are Osez les sexfriends, Comment transformer votre mec en Brad Pitt en 30 jours, and Sexe, mensonge et banlieues chaudes. When the existence of these books was revealed at the time of her appointment as Secretary of State for Gender Equality, she faced numerous attacks, which she described as sexist. 'I have a colleague in government who is well known to have written a novel. No one ever teases him about it, no one even mentions it. It's seen as normal: it's a bit cheeky, but that's fine, he's a man, he's allowed,' she once remarked. Ultimately, she has not hidden her past and has defended these works as a way of challenging society's views on women's relationship to sexuality. Schiappa is a prolific author. During her time in office, she published 11 books under her own name and one through her 'romantic' alter ego, Marie Minelli. She has not only faced criticism for the time spent writing, but also for posing for Playboy magazine. When she appeared on the cover of the April 2023 issue, her then boss, Prime Minister Élisabeth Borne, reportedly called her to say the interview was 'inappropriate'. Three months later, when the government was reshuffled, her name (as well as the one of Marie Minelli) was quietly left off the list. Quote to remember (or wish you could forget): 'I open my mouth as wide as I can, and Amaury ejaculates uncontrollably all over my face, shouting in a high-pitched voice: 'Vive la France! Vive la France! Vive la France!'' Minelli, M. (2014). Sexe, mensonges et Banlieues Chaudes. La Musardine. Bruno Le Maire, French Minister of the Economy, Finance, Industrial and Digital Sovereignty (2017-2024) Another minister in the same government also published books containing erotic scenes. Bruno Le Maire, who has served as Minister of the Economy since Emmanuel Macron's election in 2017 and previously held office under then-president Nicolas Sarkozy, is generally known for his serious, polished demeanour. But in 2023, at the height of the pension reform crisis, the publication of his novel Fugue américaine revealed a different side of the minister's personality. In this nearly 500-page novel, Le Maire tells the story of two brothers visiting Cuba in 1949 for a concert by pianist Vladimir Horowitz. Rather than the musical reflections or the cultural clash between East and West, it was a particularly explicit passage involving a young man named Oskar that drew public attention. The scene was widely shared on social media, sparking mockery online – particularly given the tense political climate – and posed a challenge for the government's communications strategy. However, this was not Bruno Le Maire's first time. In 2004, he published Le Ministre, a narrative based on his experience as adviser to Dominique de Villepin, then Minister of Foreign Affairs. In it, he recounts an intimate moment with his wife: 'I let myself be enveloped by the warmth of the bath, the light of the lagoon floating through the frosted glass door, the scent of green tea soap, and Pauline's hand gently caressing my sex.' Quote to remember (or wish you could forget): "She turned her back to me; she threw herself onto the bed; she showed me the brown swell of her anus. 'Are you coming, Oskar? I'm more dilated than ever.'" Le Maire, B. (2023). Fugue américaine: Roman. Gallimard. Esteban González Pons, Spanish Member of the European Parliament (since 2014) A well-known figure on Spain's centre-right, Esteban González Pons has served as a senator and is now a Member of the European Parliament. He is Vice-President of the Parliament and a member of the Budget Committee - positions that stand in sharp contrast to his side career as a writer of romantic and erotic fiction. In 2020, he published Ellas ('They,' in the feminine, in Spanish), a novel reflecting the author's deep love for his homeland and aimed at the generation that grew up during Spain's Transition in the 1960s and 70s. The protagonist decides to reconnect with his first love, and, in a dramatic gesture to catch her attention, sends her a suicide letter. What surprises readers are the rather explicit passages, which have drawn comparisons to Fifty Shades of Grey with some media renaming him 'González Porn'. In a 2022 interview, he brushed off these criticisms: "Journalists are very shocked when a love novel includes sex. Maybe it's because sexual education is lacking in journalism faculties". Quote to remember (or wish you could forget): "…that indifferent nudity conveyed the fullness of a mother goddess whose mons veneris would have welcomed the charge of a warrior galloping last night. She rested as pleased as a sexual praying mantis, exhausted after having swallowed her lover through the vagina, digested him in the womb, and finally expelled him again, allowed him to be reborn." Pons, E. G. (2020). Ellas. Espasa. Cleo Watson & Edwina Currie, United Kingdom Cleo Watson, a former Conservative political aide and special adviser to Prime Minister Boris Johnson, made headlines in 2023 with her debut novel, Whips. The book blends Westminster intrigue with office romances and personal entanglements. The novel ranges from a clandestine romance between rival Tory and Labour candidates who meet on a dating app, to the Prime Minister secretly watching porn, and even a Secretary of State answering committee questions while wearing a discreet vibrating device. Cleo Watson was part of the 'PartyGate' that led to the fall of Boris Johnson – and was even fined for it – she then published a follow-up in 2024, Cleavage. But she was not the first to write an erotic book using the UK political scene. Edwina Currie, Conservative MP for South Derbyshire from 1983 to 1997 and Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Health under Margaret Thatcher, also turned to fiction after leaving politics. Her 1994 novel, A Parliamentary Affair, interweaves Westminster manoeuvres with intimate relationships, exploring the personal dramas of those working in the high-pressure world of politics. Currie's writing is partly reconstructed from her real-life affair with former UK Prime Minister John Major.

Which countries collect the most from property taxes across Europe?
Which countries collect the most from property taxes across Europe?

Euronews

time4 hours ago

  • Euronews

Which countries collect the most from property taxes across Europe?

Spain is considering a 100% tax on homes bought by non-EU buyers. While the goal is to ease the country's housing problem, property tax is a major source of income in many European countries. According to the European Commission, property tax as a share of GDP in the EU ranges from 0.3% in Czechia and Estonia to 3.7% in France in 2023. The EU average is 1.9%. But how much property tax do governments collect across Europe? What share of total tax revenue comes from property taxes? And how much does real estate transfer tax amount to as a percentage of GDP? Euronews Business takes a closer look at property tax revenues across Europe. What share of GDP does property tax make up? In the EU, property tax contributes to the highest share of GDP in France (3.7%) and the lowest in Czechia and Estonia (both 0.3%). When European Free Trade Association (EFTA) countries, the UK, and Turkey are included—using some OECD data—the UK ranks slightly above France, though both are around 3.7%. Belgium is also above 3%, at 3.2%. Spain ranks fifth at 2.5%, followed by Greece at 2.7%. Other countries with a share above 2% include Iceland, Luxembourg, Denmark, Switzerland, Italy, and Portugal. Property tax accounts for less than 1% of GDP in nearly half of the 32 countries on the list. It is especially low in Slovakia, Lithuania, Estonia, and Czechia, all below 0.5%. Among Europe's five largest economies, Germany has a significantly lower share at 1% compared with the others. Italy ranks fourth at 2.1%, while France and the UK top the list. The chart above shows that Northwestern Europe collects a higher percentage of their GDP through property tax, while Eastern Europe and the Baltics collects a lower share. In Southern Europe, the picture is more mixed, though often on the higher side. According to the OECD, property taxes include all recurrent and non-recurrent levies on the use, ownership, or transfer of property. They cover taxes on immovable property or net wealth, inheritance and gift taxes, and taxes on financial and capital transactions. What about revenues from property taxes? The UK collected the most property tax revenue in 2023 at €115 billion (£100bn), followed by France at €104.5 billion. These two countries dominate property tax revenues, with third-place Italy collecting just €45.3 billion. Germany and Spain complete the top five, collecting €41.4 billion and €36.8 billion respectively. The EU total stands at €318.8 billion. Belgium (€18.8 billion), Switzerland (€17.9 billion), the Netherlands (€14.4 billion), and Poland (€10.7 billion) also collected over €10 billion in property tax revenue in 2023. In 10 EU countries, property tax revenue is below €1 billion, with Estonia the lowest at €110 million. Property tax as a share of total taxation The share of property taxes making up total taxation varies widely across Europe. In 2023, in the EU, it ranges from 0.8% in Estonia and Czechia to 8.4% in France, according to the European Commission. The EU average was 4.7%. In addition to France, seven other EU countries had property tax shares above 5%: Belgium (7.4%), Greece (7%), Spain (6.7%), Portugal (5.9%), Luxembourg (5.7%), Italy (5.1%), and Denmark (5.1%). In Germany, property taxes account for just 2.5% of total taxation. Shares of property transfer tax across Europe Property transfer taxes, expressed as a share of GDP, indicate the importance of real estate sales as a source of government revenue in some countries. These taxes apply to financial and capital transactions, mainly involving buying, selling, and stamp duties. According to the OECD, this share was 1% of GDP in Italy in 2023, followed by Belgium, Portugal, and Spain (all 0.8%). In France, property transfer taxes accounted for 0.7% of GDP, compared with 0.6% in the UK and 0.3% in Germany. Spain's proposal for a property 100% tax for non-EU buyers is sparking debate across Europe. In May 2025, during hearings at the European Parliament, José García Montalvo, Professor of Economics at Pompeu Fabra University in Barcelona, said housing tax policies may not be the most efficient way to address certain problems in the housing market. 'Constant policy changes and lack of coordination between tax policy and housing supply measures undermine the effectiveness of housing tax policies leading to unpredictable market outcomes and persistent problems of affordability,' he said. Diana Hourani from the Personal and Property Taxes Unit of OECD, noted that there is significant scope to enhance the efficiency, equity and revenue potential of many different types of housing taxes in OECD countries. 'Improving these taxes can, in many cases, also ease upward pressure on house prices,' Hourani added.

Global markets mixed ahead of Trump-Zelenskyy meeting
Global markets mixed ahead of Trump-Zelenskyy meeting

Euronews

time16 hours ago

  • Euronews

Global markets mixed ahead of Trump-Zelenskyy meeting

World shares are mixed ahead of US President Donald Trump's meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and other European leaders later on Monday afternoon. Markets showed scant reaction to Trump's inconclusive summit meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday. Investors are also watching for cues from an annual meeting in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, of top central bankers later this week. Global markets on Monday morning In early European trading, Germany's DAX lost 0.2% to 24,303.26, while the CAC 40 in Paris dropped 0.5% to 7,881.74. Britain's FTSE 100 was little changed at 9,137.31. The futures for the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average edged 0.1% lower. On Friday, the S&P 500 fell 0.3%. The Dow industrials edged 0.1% higher, while the Nasdaq composite sank 0.4%. During Asia's day, Japan's Nikkei 225 gained 0.8% to 43.714.31. The Hang Seng in Hong Kong gave up early gains, losing 0.4% to close at 25,176.85. The Shanghai Composite index jumped 1% to 3,732.44. It's trading near it's highest level in a decade. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 picked up 0.2% to 8,959.30. The Kospi in South Korea declined 1.5% to 3,177.28 on heavy selling of semiconductor makers like Samsung Electronics, whose shares fell 2.2%. SK Hynix lost 3.3% as investors fretted over the possibility of more US tariffs on computer chips. In other dealings early Monday, US benchmark crude oil rose 7 cents to $62.87 per barrel, while Brent crude, the international standard, climbed 3 cents to $65.88 per barrel. The US dollar rose to 147.37 Japanese yen from 147.18 yen. The euro slipped to $1.1682 from $1.1703. Trump meets Zelenskyy Trump's meeting with Zelenskyy will include other European leaders who were not included in the president's talks in Anchorage, Alaska, with Putin. The European allies are seeking to present a united front in safeguarding Ukraine and the continent from any widening aggression from Moscow. An annual meeting in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, of top central bankers later this week will be watched closely for hints about possible interest rate cuts from Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell. He is due to speak Friday at the economic policy conference. 'While the official theme is labour markets, investors will scrutinise any hint of September policy direction, especially after last week's mixed inflation data,' Ipek Ozkardeskaya of Swissquote said in a commentary, adding that 'any progress on Ukraine peace talks could push global equities higher still.' Expectations have been building that the Fed will cut interest rates at its next meeting in September, though mixed reports on the US economy have undercut those bets somewhat. One report Friday said shoppers boosted their spending at US retailers last month, while another said manufacturing in New York state unexpectedly grew. A third said industrial production across the country shrank last month, when economists were looking for modest growth. Yet another report suggested sentiment among US consumers is worsening due to worries about inflation, when economists expected to see a slight improvement.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store