Saturday, March 20, 2021

Briquetting of Pineapple Plantation Waste

Pineapple is a fruit that is quite popular throughout the world, this can be seen from the percentage of pineapple fruit production in world fruit production which reaches 8%. Pineapple plants are almost the same as banana trees, that is, after bearing fruit once, the plant dies, and then the production is continued by the saplings for several generations. Or more specifically, pineapple plants produce after 1-2 years of planting and die after fruiting and produce about 70 leaves. The pineapple plants will be dismantled after two or three harvests to be replaced by new plants, which results in increasing pineapple leaf waste. Currently there is almost no utilization of this waste and pineapple leaves also cannot be used for animal feed, so they are only burned or thrown away which also causes environmental pollution. In every hectare of pineapple plantation, the waste produced can reach 3 tons. Large pineapple plantations are usually with an area of  thousands or even tens of thousand of hectares so that the production of this waste is also very much. Handling pineapple leaf waste with an effective and efficient method will certainly provide added value when examined from an economic point of view, so it is necessary to make efforts to handle this waste and briquetting  can be the perfect solution to this problem.

Although both use biomass densification technology, briquetting of pineapple leaves and stems is easier and cheaper than to make pellets. The production of pineapple leaf briquettes can then be used for cooking fuel, industry and even electricity generation. In addition, pineapple leaf briquettes are also used to increase biogas production. There are large pineapple plantation companies that have cattle farming businesses. Cattle farms are chosen mainly because they can use pineapple skin or fruit waste to feed the cows. And because the volume of pineapples produced is also very large, the fruit waste is also large and the cattle farm that is made is also large. The cow manure is usually further processed for biogas production and the digestate of biogas then composted. The compost produced is reused in the pineapple plantation. The briquettes of pineapple leaves and stems added to the substrate or co-digestion will further increase the biogas production significantly. Read here for more details.

With a scenario like the one above, almost all of the biomass waste generated from the pineapple plantation and industry can be utilized optimally. Likewise, the waste from a side business in the form of cattle farming for biogas production. In addition to large pineapple plantation companies, pineapple production centers in Indonesia such as Subang, Pemalang, Prabumulih, Kediri, Blitar, Kubu Raya, Mempawah, Muaro Jambi, Kampar, Central Lampung and Karimun can also develop the above concepts.

3 comments:

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