3.1 General processing description
Research and development
work in many disciplines - biochemistry, chemical and mechanical engineering -
and the establishment of plantations, which provided the opportunity for
large-scale fully mechanised processing, resulted in the evolution of a
sequence of processing steps designed to extract, from a harvested oil palm
bunch, a high yield of a product of acceptable quality for the international
edible oil trade. The oil winning process, in summary, involves the reception
of fresh fruit bunches from the plantations, sterilizing and threshing of the
bunches to free the palm fruit, mashing the fruit and pressing out the crude
palm oil. The crude oil is further treated to purify and dry it for storage and
export.
Large-scale plants,
featuring all stages required to produce palm oil to international standards,
are generally handling from 3 to 60 tonnes of FFB/hr. The large installations
have mechanical handling systems (bucket and screw conveyers, pumps and
pipelines) and operate continuously, depending on the availability of FFB.
Boilers, fuelled by fibre and shell, produce superheated steam, used to
generate electricity through turbine generators. The lower pressure steam from
the turbine is used for heating purposes throughout the factory. Most
processing operations are automatically controlled and routine sampling and
analysis by process control laboratories ensure smooth, efficient operation.
Although such large installations are capital intensive, extraction rates of 23
- 24 percent palm oil per bunch can be achieved from good quality Tenera.
Conversion of crude palm
oil to refined oil involves removal of the products of hydrolysis and
oxidation, colour and flavour. After refining, the oil may be separated
(fractionated) into liquid and solid phases by thermo-mechanical means
(controlled cooling, crystallization, and filtering), and the liquid fraction
(olein) is used extensively as a liquid cooking oil in tropical climates,
competing successfully with the more expensive groundnut, corn, and sunflower
oils.
Extraction of oil from the
palm kernels is generally separate from palm oil extraction, and will often be
carried out in mills that process other oilseeds (such as groundnuts, rapeseed,
cottonseed, shea nuts or copra). The stages in this process comprise grinding
the kernels into small particles, heating (cooking), and extracting the oil
using an oilseed
expeller or
petroleum-derived solvent. The oil then requires clarification in a filter
press or by sedimentation. Extraction is a well-established industry, with
large numbers of international manufacturers able to offer equipment that can
process from 10 kg to several tonnes per hour.
Alongside the development
of these large-scale fully mechanised oil palm mills and their installation in
plantations supplying the international edible oil refining industry,
small-scale village and artisanal processing has continued in Africa. Ventures
range in throughput from a few hundred kilograms up to 8 tonnes FFB per day and
supply crude oil to the domestic market.
Efforts to mechanise and
improve traditional manual procedures have been undertaken by research bodies,
development agencies, and private sector engineering companies, but these
activities have been piecemeal and uncoordinated. They have generally
concentrated on removing the tedium and drudgery from the mashing or pounding
stage (digestion), and improving the efficiency of oil extraction. Small
mechanical, motorised digesters (mainly scaled-down but unheated versions of
the large-scale units described above), have been developed in most oil palm
cultivating African countries.
Palm oil processors of all
sizes go through these unit operational stages. They differ in the level of
mechanisation of each unit operation and the interconnecting materials transfer
mechanisms that make the system batch or continuous. The scale of operations
differs at the level of process and product quality control that may be
achieved by the method of mechanisation adopted. The technical terms referred
to in the diagram above will be described later.
The general flow diagram is
as follows:
PALM
OIL PROCESSING UNIT OPERATIONS
Harvesting technique and handling effects
In the early
stages of fruit formation, the oil content of the fruit is very low. As the
fruit approaches maturity the formation of oil increases rapidly to about 50
percent of mesocarp weigh. In a fresh ripe, un-bruised fruit the free fatty
acid (FFA) content of the oil is below 0.3 percent. However, in the ripe fruit
the exocarp becomes soft and is more easily attacked by lipolytic enzymes,
especially at the base when the fruit becomes detached from the bunch. The
enzymatic attack results in an increase in the FFA of the oil through hydrolysis.
Research has shown that if the fruit is bruised, the FFA in the
damaged part of
the fruit increases rapidly to 60 percent in an hour. There is therefore great
variation in the composition and quality within the bunch, depending on how
much the bunch has been bruised.
Harvesting
involves the cutting of the bunch from the tree and allowing it to fall to the
ground by gravity. Fruits may be damaged in the process of pruning palm fronds
to expose the bunch base to facilitate bunch cutting. As the bunch (weighing
about 25 kg) falls to the ground the impact bruises the fruit. During loading
and unloading of bunches into and out of transport containers there are further
opportunities for the fruit to be bruised.
In Africa most
bunches are conveyed to the processing site in baskets carried on the head. To
dismount the load, the tendency is to dump contents of the basket onto the
ground. This results in more bruises. Sometimes trucks and push carts, unable
to set bunches down gently, convey the cargo from the villages to the
processing site. Again, tumbling the fruit bunches from the carriers is rough,
resulting in bruising of the soft exocarp. In any case care should be exercised
in handling the fruit to avoid excessive bruising.
One answer to
the many ways in which harvesting, transportation and handling of bunches can
cause fruit to be damaged is to process the fruit as early as possible after
harvest, say within 48 hours. However the author believes it is better to leave
the fruit to ferment for a few days before processing. Connoisseurs of good
edible palm oil know that the increased FFA only adds ‘bite’ to the oil
flavour. At worst, the high FFA content oil has good laxative effects. The free
fatty acid content is not a quality issue for those who consume the crude oil
directly, although it is for oil refiners, who have a problem with
neutralization of high FFA content palm oil.
3.1.1 Bunch reception
Fresh fruit arrives from the
field as bunches or loose fruit. The fresh fruit is normally emptied into
wooden boxes suitable for weighing on a scale so that quantities of fruit
arriving at the processing site may be checked. Large installations use
weighbridges to weigh materials in trucks.
The quality standard
achieved is initially dependent on the quality of bunches arriving at the mill.
The mill cannot improve upon this quality but can prevent or minimise further
deterioration.
The field factors that
affect the composition and final quality of palm oil are genetic, age of the
tree, agronomic, environmental, harvesting technique, handling and transport.
Many of these factors are beyond the control of a small-scale processor.
Perhaps some control may be exercised over harvesting technique as well as
post-harvest transport and handling.
The fresh fruit bunch
consists of fruit embedded in spikelets growing on a main stem. Manual
threshing is achieved by cutting the fruit-laden spikelets from the bunch stem
with an axe or machete and then separating the fruit from the spikelets by
hand. Children and the elderly in the village earn income as casual labourers
performing this activity at the factory site.
In a mechanised system a
rotating drum or fixed drum equipped with rotary beater bars detach the fruit
from the bunch, leaving the spikelets on the stem (Fig. 3).
Most small-scale processors
do not have the capacity to generate steam for sterilization. Therefore, the
threshed fruits are cooked in water. Whole bunches which include spikelets
absorb a lot of water in the cooking process. High-pressure steam is more
effective in heating bunches without losing much water. Therefore, most
small-scale operations thresh bunches before the fruits are cooked, while
high-pressure sterilization systems thresh bunches after heating to loosen the
fruits.
Small-scale operators use
the bunch waste (empty bunches) as cooking fuel. In larger mills the bunch
waste is incinerated and the ash, a rich source of potassium, is returned to
the plantation as fertilizer.
Sterilization or cooking
means the use of high-temperature wet-heat treatment of loose fruit. Cooking
normally uses hot water; sterilization uses pressurized steam. The cooking
action serves several purposes.
· Heat treatment destroys
oil-splitting enzymes and arrests hydrolysis and autoxidation.
· For large-scale
installations, where bunches are cooked whole, the wet heat weakens the fruit
stem and makes it easy to remove the fruit from bunches on shaking or tumbling
in the threshing machine.
· Heat helps to solidify
proteins in which the oil-bearing cells are microscopically dispersed. The
protein solidification (coagulation) allows the oil-bearing cells to come
together and flow more easily on application of pressure.
· Fruit cooking weakens the
pulp structure, softening it and making it easier to detach the fibrous
material and its contents during the digestion process. The high heat is enough
to partially disrupt the oil-containing cells in the mesocarp and permits oil
to be released more readily.
· The moisture introduced by
the steam acts chemically to break down gums and resins. The gums and resins
cause the oil to foam during frying. Some of the gums and resins are soluble in
water. Others can be made soluble in water, when broken down by wet steam
(hydrolysis), so that they can be removed during oil clarification. Starches
present in the fruit are hydrolyzed and removed in this way.
· When high-pressure steam
is used for sterilization, the heat causes the moisture in the nuts to expand.
When the pressure is reduced the contraction of the nut leads to the detachment
of the kernel from the shell wall, thus loosening the kernels within their
shells. The detachment of the kernel from the shell wall greatly facilitates
later nut cracking operations. From the foregoing, it is obvious that
sterilization (cooking) is one of the most important operations in oil
processing, ensuring the success of several other phases.
· However, during
sterilization it is important to ensure evacuation of air from the sterilizer.
Air not only acts as a barrier to heat transfer, but oil oxidation increases
considerably at high temperatures; hence oxidation risks are high during
sterilization. Over-sterilization can also lead to poor bleach ability of the
resultant oil. Sterilization is also the chief factor responsible for the
discolouration of palm kernels, leading to poor bleach ability of the extracted
oil and reduction of the protein value of the press cake.
Fig.
3 Bunch thresher (Centre de Formation Technique Steinmetz-Benin)
Fig.
4 Fruit sterilizer (Centre de Formation Technique Steinmetz-Benin)
3.1.4 Digestion of the fruit
Digestion is the process of
releasing the palm oil in the fruit through the rupture or breaking down of the
oil-bearing cells. The digester commonly used consists of a steam-heated
cylindrical vessel fitted with a central rotating shaft carrying a number of beater
(stirring) arms. Through the action of the rotating beater arms the fruit is
pounded. Pounding, or digesting the fruit at high temperature, helps to reduce
the viscosity of the oil, destroys the fruits’ outer covering (exocarp), and
completes the disruption of the oil cells already begun in the sterilization
phase. Unfortunately, for reasons related to cost and maintenance, most
small-scale digesters do not have the heat insulation and steam injections that
help to maintain their contents at elevated temperatures during this operation.
Contamination from iron is
greatest during digestion when the highest rate of metal wear is encountered in
the milling process. Iron contamination increases the risk of oil oxidation and
the onset of oil rancidity.
There are two distinct
methods of extracting oil from the digested material. One system uses
mechanical presses and is called the ‘dry’ method. The other called the ‘wet’
method uses hot water to leach out the oil.
In the ‘dry’ method the
objective of the extraction stage is to squeeze the oil out of a mixture of
oil, moisture, fibre and nuts by applying mechanical pressure on the digested
mash. There are a large number of different types of presses but the principle
of operation is similar for each. The presses may be designed for batch (small
amounts of material operated upon for a time period) or continuous operations.
In batch operations,
material is placed in a heavy metal ‘cage’ and a metal plunger is used to press
the material. The main differences in batch press designs are as follows: a)
the method used to move the plunger and apply the pressure; b) the amount of
pressure in the press; and c) the size of the cage.
The plunger can be moved manually
or by a motor. The motorised method is faster but more expensive.
Different designs use either
a screw thread (spindle press) (Fig. 4, 5, 6) or a hydraulic system (hydraulic
press) (Fig. 7, 8, 9) to move the plunger. Higher pressures may be attained
using the hydraulic system but care should be taken to ensure that poisonous
hydraulic fluid does not contact the oil or raw material. Hydraulic fluid can
absorb moisture from the air and lose its effectiveness and the plungers wear
out and need frequent replacement. Spindle press screw threads are made from
hard steel and held by softer steel nuts so that the nuts wear out faster than
the screw. These are easier and cheaper to replace than the screw.
The size of the cage varies
from 5 kg to 30 kg with an average size of 15 kg. The pressure should be
increased gradually to allow time for the oil to escape. If the depth of
material is too great, oil will be trapped in the centre. To prevent this,
heavy plates’ can be inserted into the raw material. The production rate of
batch presses depends on the size of the cage and the time needed to fill,
press and empty each batch.
Hydraulic presses are faster
than spindle screw types and powered presses are faster than manual types. Some
types of manual press require considerable effort to operate and do not
alleviate drudgery.
The early centrifuges and
hydraulic presses have now given way to specially designed screw-presses
similar to those used for other oilseeds. These consist of a cylindrical
perforated cage through which runs a closely fitting screw. Digested fruit is
continuously conveyed through the cage towards an outlet restricted by a cone,
which creates the pressure to expel the oil through the cage perforations
(drilled holes). Oil-bearing cells that are not ruptured in the digester will
remain unopened if a hydraulic or centrifugal extraction system is employed.
Screw presses, due to the turbulence and kneading action exerted on the fruit
mass in the press cage, can effectively break open the unopened oil cells and
release more oil. These presses act as an additional digester and are efficient
in oil extraction.
Moderate metal wear occurs
during the pressing operation, creating a source of iron contamination. The
rate of wear depends on the type of press, method of pressing, nut-to-fibre
ratio, etc. High pressing pressures are reported to have an adverse effect on
the bleach ability and oxidative conservation of the extracted oil.
The main point of
clarification is to separate the oil from its entrained impurities. The fluid
coming out of the press is a mixture of palm oil, water, cell debris, fibrous
material and ‘non-oily solids’. Because of the non-oily solids the mixture is
very thick (viscous). Hot water is therefore added to the press output mixture
to thin it. The dilution (addition of water) provides a barrier causing the
heavy solids to fall to the bottom of the container while the lighter oil
droplets flow through the watery mixture to the top when heat is applied to
break the emulsion (oil suspended in water with the aid of gums and resins).
Water is added in a ratio of 3:1.
The diluted mixture is
passed through a screen to remove coarse fibre. The screened mixture is boiled
from one or two hours and then allowed to settle by gravity in the large tank
so that the palm oil, being lighter than water, will separate and rise to the
top. The clear oil is decanted into a reception tank. This clarified oil still
contains traces of water and dirt. To prevent increasing FFA through
autocatalytic hydrolysis of the oil, the moisture content of the oil must be
reduced to 0.15 to 0.25 percent. Re-heating the decanted oil in a cooking pot
and carefully skimming off the dried oil from any engrained dirt removes any
residual moisture. Continuous clarifiers consist of three compartments to treat
the crude mixture, dry decanted oil and hold finished oil in an outer shell as
a heat exchanger. (Fig. 10, 11, 12)
Fig. 9 Manual
vertical press (O.P.C., Cameroon)
Fig.
10 Motorised horizontal screw press (Centre Songhai, Benin)
Fig.
11 Combined digester and motorised hydraulic press (Technoserve/Cort
Engineering, Ghana)
Fig.
12 Flushing extractor (Cort Engineering Services, Ghana)
Summary of Unit
operations
|
Unit operation
|
Purpose
|
1.
|
Fruit
fermentation
|
To
loosen fruit base from spikelets and to allow ripening processes to abate
|
2.
|
Bunch
chopping
|
To
facilitate manual removal of fruit
|
3.
|
Fruit
sorting
|
To
remove and sort fruit from spikelets
|
4.
|
Fruit
boiling
|
To
sterilize and stop enzymatic spoilage, coagulate protein and expose
microscopic oil cells
|
5
|
Fruit
digestion
|
To
rupture oil-bearing cells to allow oil flow during extraction while
separating fibre from nuts
|
6
|
Mash pressing
|
To
release fluid palm oil using applied pressure on ruptured cellular contents
|
7
|
Oil
purification
|
To boil
mixture of oil and water to remove water-soluble gums and resins in the oil,
dry decanted oil by further heating
|
8
|
Fibre-nut
separation
|
To separate
de-oiled fibre from palm nuts.
|
9
|
Second
Pressing
|
To
recover residual oil for use as soap stock
|
10
|
Nut
drying
|
To sun
dry nuts for later cracking
|
Fig.
13 Clarifier tank (O.P.C., Cameroon)
Fig.
14 Clarifier tank (Nova Technologies Ltd., Nigeria)
Fig.
15 Oil filter (Faith Engineering Workshop, Nigeria)
Fig.
16 Palm nut cracker (AGRICO, Ghana)
Fig.
17 Palm nut cracker (NOVA, Technologies, Nigeria)
3.2
Process equipment design and selection criteria
In designing
equipment for small-scale oil extraction one of the key factors to consider is
the quality required. ‘Quality’ is entirely subjective and depends on the
demands of the ultimate consumer. For the edible oil refining industry the most
important quality criteria for crude oil are:
·
low content of free fatty acids
(which are costly to remove during oil refining);
·
low content of products of
oxidation (which generate off-flavours);
·
readily removed colour.
The most
critical stages in the processing sequence for a processor seeking to satisfy
these criteria are: bunch sterilization as soon as possible after harvest; and
effective clarification and drying of the crude oil after extraction.
By contrast, for
the domestic consumer of crude palm oil, flavour is the primary quality factor.
This is boosted by the fermentation that takes place within the fruit when the
bunches are allowed to rest for three or more days after harvesting. Thus sterilization
immediately after harvesting is not a crucial consideration. Herbs and spices
for flavour are introduced during the oil-drying phase of operations to mask
off-flavours. Therefore rigid process control during oil clarification need not
be prescribed or incorporated in the design.
The free fatty
acids and the trace tocopherols contained in the crude palm oil after natural
fermentation also have a laxative effect, which is desirable for African
consumers for whom synthetic substitutes are a luxury. The acidity imparts a
‘bite’ to the oil which some consumers prefer. Thus the quality requirements of
one market, leading to certain processing imperatives, may conflict with those
of another market.
The traditional
manual methods are normally referred to as ‘low technology’ production. The
mechanised units are likewise referred to as ‘intermediate technology’
production.
The village
traditional method of extracting palm oil involves washing pounded fruit mash
in warm water and hand squeezing to separate fibre and nuts from the oil/water
mixture. A colander, basket or a vessel with fine perforated holes in the
bottom is used to filter out fibre and nuts. The wet mixture is then put on the
fire and brought to a vigorous boil. After about one or two hours, depending on
the volume of material being boiled, the firewood is
taken out and
the boiled mixture allowed to cool. Herbs may be added to the mixture at this
point just before reducing the heat. On cooling to around blood temperature, a
calabash or shallow bowl is used to skim off the palm oil. Because of the large
quantities of water used in washing the pulp this is called the ‘wet’ method.
A mechanical
improvement, based on the traditional wet method process, is achieved by using
a vertical digester with perforated bottom plate (to discharge the aqueous
phase) and a side chute for discharging the solid phase components. The
arrangement combines digestion, pressing and hot water dilution into one
mechanical unit operation.
The ‘dry’ method
uses a digester to pound the boiled fruit, which is a considerable
labour-saving device. The oil in the digested or pounded pulp is separated in a
press that may be manual or mechanical. Motorised mechanical presses are
preferred, whether hydraulic or screw type.
Most medium- and
large-scale processing operations adopt the ’dry’ method of oil extraction.
This is because the fibre and nut shells may immediately used to fire the
boiler to generate steam for sterilization and other operations, including
electricity generation. If the huge volumes of fibre and shells are not used as
boiler fuel, serious environmental pollution problems may result. Too much
water in the fibre increases the amount and cost of steam required to dry the
fibre. Hence the preference for the dry method in plants handling more than six
tonnes FFB per hour.
Processing
machinery manufacturers tend to make machines to fit individual processing
operations. However, recent developments have been toward the manufacture of
integrated machines, combining several process operations such as digestion,
pressing and fibre/nut separation into one assembly. It is found that these
machines fit into two key process groupings: batch and semi-continuous
processes.
Schematic of processing models and associated
machinery
NB:
NOS = Non -oily solids entrained in oil such as coagulated protein, gums and
resins, etc.
The
extraction of palm oil from boiled palm fruit can be accomplished by handling
successive batches of materials or continuously feeding material to the
machines.
3.2.1 Batch systems
The batch systems work
directly on successive loads of boiled fruit to extract oil in one operation
for clarification. The ‘wet’ method uses a vertical digester (Fig. 11) with a
perforated bottom plate to pound a batch of fruit and then flush out the oil
and other non-oil solids from the mashed pulp with hot water. The direct
screw-press is designed to pound a batch of boiled fruit in the entry section
of the machine while exerting pressure on the mashed pulp in another section to
expel the palm oil in one operation.
The advantage of the wet
system is that it is simple and completely leaches all oil and non-oily solid
substances that can be carried in the fluid stream out of the digested mash to
give clean and separated nuts and fibre. The aqueous effluent from the vertical
digester goes directly to the clarification stage of processing. The amount of
water needed to flush
the pulp is normally the
same as that required for diluting the viscous oil that comes from the
mechanical press in preparation for clarification. An inexperienced operator
may use too much hot water to leach out the oil and thus consume unnecessary
wood fuel.
The ‘wet’ method yield of
palm oil is severely reduced when the wash water is cold. In the course of
digesting the fruit mash, in the presence of water, there is increased tendency
to form an oil/water emulsion that is difficult to separate from the fibre
mass. The emulsified oil loss in the fibre can be substantial if care is not
taken to ensure full loading of the digester. Vertical flushing digesters,
requiring loading and discharging of a specific amount of material, can thus
only be used in a batch operation.
Continuous systems work
sequentially, with one operation feeding directly into another, related to the
arrangement and timing of machine operations. Careful engineering of unit
operations is required to minimise discontinuities in the feeding of one stage
into another. Otherwise some machines have to be stopped periodically for other
stations to catch up. When there are discontinuities in the flow of materials
between process stations the operations are known as semi-continuous. The dry
extraction systems with separate digestion and pressing stations are usually
semi-continuous.
Also when digestion and
pressing stations are combined into an integrated unit and there is
discontinuous feeding of boiled fruit to the digester inlet the operation is
termed “semi-continuous”. Once operations have been integrated to attain full
continuity the capital investment capacity of small-scale operators has been
surpassed, because both machinery and working capital for raw material
increases greatly with the increased level of mechanisation.
The dry systems do not need
much water for processing, although they have the disadvantage of leaving
substantial residual oil in the press cake. The oil content of the press cake
can be quite considerable (2-3 percent), depending on the type of press used
and the strength of manual operators.
The efficiency with which
the various presses can extract oil ranges from 60 to 70 percent for spindle
presses, 80-87 percent for hydraulic presses and 75-80 percent for the Caltech
screw-presses. The first-pressing oil extraction rates also range from 12 to 15
percent for the
spindle-presses, 14-16 percent for hydraulic presses and 17-19 percent for the
motorised screw-presses. (Rouziere, 1995)
In many instances the first
press cake is then sorted to remove the nuts, and the fibre is subsequently
subjected to a second pressing to obtain more oil (an additional 3 to 4 percent
on FFB). The second press oil is generally of lower quality, in terms of free
fatty acid content and rancidity. Such low-grade oil is used in soap-making.
Some village processors undertake the traditional hot water washing of the
entire press cake immediately after pressing instead of sorting fibre and
second pressing.
Local manufacturers have
developed a wide range of machinery and equipment for processing palm oil and
palm kernel to fit any budget. All the relevant unit operational machines can
be produced to various degrees of finish and quality in the Sub-Region. It is
the combination of the unit operation into an affordable process chain that
distinguishes the manufacturers and their supplies.
From traditional
technologies that rely solely on manual labour and simple cooking utensils,
raising the level of mechanization depends largely on a balance between the
quantity of bunches available for processing in a given locality and the money
available for investment in machines.
The first consideration
should be the availability of raw materials and how to compute the processing
scale. Knowing the optimum scale of operations, it is then possible to consider
the type of processing techniques. The higher the technology, the more skilful
operators will be required to handle the machines. These technical
considerations should lead to the equipment selection and examination of the
capital investments needed to acquire the necessary machines.
Assume a Village Group
decides to plant oil palm and establishes a program to plant a certain number
of seedlings each year over a seven-year period. In the third year the first
set of trees begin to bear fruit. The community wants to establish a processing
mill and they call an expert. How is the estimation made of the size and type
of processing unit required by the community?
Start by establishing the
block of planted areas by year so the age of the trees may be determined. The
oil palm tree begins to bear fruit from the third year and the yield per tree
increases progressively with age until it peaks around 20 years. The yield
begins to decline from year 25 through 40 when the economic life of the tree
ebbs.
Table 3 describes the
potential yields of palm fruit bunches (in metric tonnes) from the planted
hectares per year. Estimates in Table 3 are used to calculate the expected
annual yield for each annual block. For example, 8 700 seedlings planted in
1998 began to yield fruit in 2000 at the rate of 3 tonnes per hectare to give
198 tonnes for the year. By Year 7 all planted areas will be in production, at
different yield rates. The estimated annual yield per planting block is
calculated and then the column for the year is added to give the potential raw
materials available for processing. For example, in Year 7, when all planted
blocks are yielding fruit, the total is 8 919 metric tonnes (see the row
designated ‘TOTAL’). How the annual yield is distributed over the entire year
needs to be determined in order to know which period demands the attention of
processors.
The oil palm tree yield is
distributed over the entire year. Most of Central and West Africa experience
two rainfall seasons. The oil palm bears fruit in response to the rainfall
pattern and hence there are two peak harvesting periods in these regions.
Southern hemisphere tropical monsoon regions such as Malawi, Zambia and South
East Asia experience only one long rainy season and therefore tend to have a
single peak-harvesting season.
For Central and West Africa
the annual monthly distribution pattern for produce is expected to show the
following variations:
Month
|
Percent yield
|
Seasonal contribution
|
March
|
9
|
|
April
|
12
|
|
May
|
16
|
50 %
|
June
|
13
|
|
July
|
8
|
|
August
|
7
|
|
September
|
8
|
34 %
|
October
|
11
|
|
|
|
|
November
|
7
|
|
December
|
5
|
|
January
|
3
|
16
|
February
|
1
|
|
In the
peak harvesting month it is estimated that 12 to 16 percent of the annual yield
is generally available for processing. The plant that is installed must be capable
of processing the peak month output, which is generally estimated as 15 percent
of the annual output. Conservatively, it is estimated that the plant will work
two shifts during the peak season.
Table
3: Estimated annual yield per hectare (from year of planting)
Year
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
6
|
7
|
8
|
9
|
10
|
11
|
12
|
15
|
20
|
Estimated
yield
(Tonnes)
|
--
|
--
|
3.0
|
4.25
|
5.5
|
6.0
|
7.25
|
8.2
|
8.6
|
9.5
|
10.5
|
11.0
|
12.5
|
13.5
|
Table
4: Estimated FFB yields after planting and related plant capacity
Year/yield in metric tonnes
Hectares
|
1
98
|
2
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
6
|
7
|
8
|
9
|
10
|
11
|
12
|
15
|
20
|
66
|
--
|
-
|
198
|
281
|
363
|
396
|
479
|
541
|
568
|
627
|
693
|
726
|
825
|
891
|
190
|
|
-
|
-
|
570
|
808
|
1 045
|
1 140
|
1 378
|
1 558
|
1 634
|
1 805
|
1 995
|
2 375
|
2 565
|
800
|
|
|
-
|
--
|
2 400
|
3 400
|
4 400
|
4 800
|
5 800
|
6 560
|
6 880
|
7 600
|
8 800
|
10 000
|
400
|
|
|
|
--
|
--
|
1 200
|
1 700
|
2 200
|
2 400
|
2 900
|
3 280
|
3 440
|
4 400
|
5 200
|
400
|
|
|
|
|
--
|
--
|
1 200
|
1 700
|
2 200
|
2 400
|
2 900
|
3 280
|
3 440
|
5 000
|
Total
|
|
|
198
|
851
|
3 571
|
6 041
|
8 919
|
10 619
|
12 526
|
14 121
|
15 558
|
17 041
|
19 840
|
23 656
|
Peak
Month
|
|
|
29.7
|
128
|
536
|
906
|
1 338
|
1 593
|
1 879
|
2 118
|
2 334
|
2 556
|
2 976
|
3 548
|
Plant
Capacity/hr
Plant
|
|
|
0.09
|
0.4
|
1.7
|
2.8
|
4.2
|
5.0
|
6.0
|
6.6
|
7.5
|
8.0
|
9.5
|
11.0
|
Source: Poku, K. Feasibility study on Malawi palm oil mill
establishment
In Year 3 there
is the potential of processing 198 tonnes of fresh fruit bunches. Assuming that
the total quantity were to be processed in one location over a 20-day period
using 8 hours in the day, we would need a processing unit that handles 186 kg
per hour, or 93 kilos/hr if the choice was made to operate 16-hours per day.
Table 4 shows capacity based on a 16-hour working day. For this capacity a wet
type digester or the dry spindle-press operation would be recommended. By Year
5 the community would require a fully mechanised mill using motorisedDIGESTERS and
presses.
Before the sixth
year the community would have to decide whether they want to stay in the
small-scale milling category or move up to a medium-scale operation using a
continuous system of machines. If the option is to stay small-scale then the
community will need to place orders for additional small-scale processing
modules. The new set of processing machines can be placed to run alongside the
existing facility or located in another village to minimise bunch
transportation costs.
The best plant
size option for rural Africa is still unknown. Large-scale operations normally
require high-skilled labour and management expertise. Most villages do not have
such a pool of skilled labour. The villages also lack the social infrastructure
such as good accommodation, schools and hospitals that would attract
high-skilled labour. Thus, in order to establish a large-scale processing
operation, labour needs to be imported from other parts of the country. To
maintain these ‘alien’ workers and managers a provision must be made in the
capital investment for housing, schools and clinics near the processing estate.
Some of the schooling and medical services must be extended to the whole
community or there will be resentment towards the ‘alien’ workers.
Large-scale
operations also require rapid transportation of harvested bunches to the
processing site, hence the need for investment in roads and civil works. The
establishment of large-scale operations creates an overhead burden that is
beyond the capacity of a village community.
Many of the
large-scale operations established in the early 1970s have declined along with
the national economies of African nations. The cost structure of these
establishments has rendered the output products non-competitive on the
international market.
Today
decentralised small-scale processing operations are preferred in most parts of
Africa.
3.4
Process technology/capital investment considerations
Once the required plant size
has been determined, the next item to consider is the amount of money required
to buy the necessary machinery. The more money available, the more units can be
bought, to minimise the drudgery of processors.
The wide array of machinery
options makes it possible for a processor to start operations with a manual
spindle-press used to pound the palm fruit. Another may start with a single
motorised vertical wet processDIGESTER. Further up the investment
scale are those who can afford the combination horizontal digester and
screw-press or combination horizontal digester and hydraulic press along with
the associated sterilizers, threshers, and oil clarifiers. Another combination
that is yet to be tried is the combination of a horizontal motorised
screw-press in combination with a second stage vertical flushing digester for
maximum palm oil extraction and fibre/nut separation.
Type of unit
|
Key machines
|
Rated capacity
(k g FFB/hr)
|
Extraction efficiency
(%)
|
Capital investment
(US$)
|
Single
batch unit
|
|
|
|
|
Dry
|
Spindle
|
100-200
|
55
|
150-200
|
Hydraulic
|
200-300
|
67-74
|
5 000-7
000
|
|
Screw
|
250-400
|
77.4
|
1 500-6
000
|
|
Wet
|
Vertical
digester
|
500-800
|
80-90
|
1 500-2
500
|
Dry
|
Motorised
horizontal digester
(only)
|
500-1000
|
55
|
2 500-3
000
|
Dual
separate units
|
|
|
|
|
Dry
|
Digester
+ Spindle presses
|
200-300
|
60-70
|
3 000-5
000
|
Digester
+ hydraulic press
|
400-800
|
67-78
|
7 000-10
000
|
|
Semi-continuous
combined units
|
Motorised
digester +
|
500-850
|
70-87
|
10 000
|
Dry
|
hydraulic
+ spindle-press
|
|
|
-15 000
|
Digester
+ screw-press
|
500-850
|
76-90
|
12
000-15 000
|
Source:
Compiled from various sources
The extraction
efficiency refers to the percentage of oil that the machine can extract in
relation to the total oil in the boiled fruit. The type of fruit mix
(Dura/Tenera) presented for processing greatly influences the extraction
efficiency of all units.
Many of the
installations that use single spindle and manual hydraulic press units require
manual pounding with wooden mortars and pestles, foot stomping, etc. Thus the
throughput capacity of such a mill is determined by the manual pounding rate.
The presses are usually not mechanised and hence the processing capacity of the
press is also limited by the size of the press cage and the operator’s energy
level for turning the press screw or pumping the hydraulic fluid mechanism.
Another limiting
condition is the affordability of capital equipment. Where the capital
equipment cost exceeds a certain value villagers will shy away from taking
loans to purchase the combination of operations. The designer must bear in mind
that until the rural/urban migration of village youth is reversed the villages
will be mainly populated by the elderly. These elders are naturally reluctant
to take up long-term loans and the local banks are reluctant to lend to a
predominantly aged community group. In Ghana, for instance, capital equipment
costs should be around US$10 000 to be affordable to village-based individuals
or groups.
Because of the
need to keep initial capital investment to a bare minimum it is imperative that
unnecessary mechanised unit operations are eliminated. Work that can be done
manually - without overly taxing profitability - should be, thereby taking
advantage of surplus labour and creating a stream of wages and salaries in the
local community. Operations that are usually associated with drudgery by
processors, such as fruitDIGESTION and oil
extraction, can be mechanised. Other less strenuous tasks, such as fruit
separation and fibre/nut separation, can be contracted out to elderly women and
unemployed youth.
“Small-scale”
does not necessarily mean a significant decrease in efficiency. It does,
however, mean a reduction in working capital and operating costs. The small
mills can be placed at the heart of local communities, minimising reliance on
vehicular transport that is normally unavailable in rural communities, given
the poor condition of road networks and other infrastructure. This increased
accessibility serves to dramatically reduce fruit spoilage and consequent
post-harvest losses.
Culturally, men
cultivate or produce while women process and sell. Traditionally, women decide
the form in which the produce is to be traded and hence determine the degree of
processing they are willing to undertake. These decisions form the basis of traditional
technologies upon which innovations are to be derived.
The operating
philosophy for equipment innovation should therefore be an attempt to develop
machinery to alleviate the drudgery of female processors while providing
additional avenues for the employment of those displaced by the improved
technologies, keeping some operations labour-intensive. It is therefore
important to mechanise the key drudgery-alleviation equipment that can be
easily handled by women.
Prime mover
power is also a major consideration. Most villages do not have electricity and
hence the diesel engine is the main source of power. Thus, for cost reasons
there cannot be a multiplicity of these engines to drive the required unit
operations. Where there is the need to drive several machines the answer could
be to use diesel power to generate electricity. The cost and maintenance of
this power source would eliminate most small-scale processors and communities.
The power source in such instances acts as a limitation to the number of unit
operations that can be mechanised and powered. Systems of pulleys and gears to
drive operational machines should be actively considered when designing for
village based groups.
Askm tuan,buku apa yang sesuai di baca untuk pemprosesan minyak sawit.
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