Fiber and palm kernel shells (PKS) are palm oil mill solid wastes that
are produced in CPO production in that mill. The amount of fiber and PKS
waste is quite a lot, which is around 20% of each fresh fruit bunch
(FFB) or almost the same as the CPO produced. A palm oil mill with a
capacity of 60 tons / hour FFB can produce fiber as much as 8.1 tons per
hour or 194.4 tons per day and PKS of 3.3 tons / hour per hour or 79.2
tons per day. And because both of them are waste, generally the
utilization of the waste is not initially considered, including for use
as fuel in boilers in palm oil mills for the production of electricity
and steam. The use of fiber and PKS for boiler fuel generally uses 100%
fiber and about 30% of the PKS. Under these conditions the remaining 70%
of the PKS can be used for other things including being sold or even
exported.
When the shell becomes a commercial commodity and demand is greater,
palm oil mills replace their old inefficient boilers with new boilers
that have a high level of efficiency. In this way, 100% of the PKS is no
longer used to boiler fuel and only requires fiber as fuel. In this
condition a paradigm shift in thinking begins to occur, that is when the
solid waste is almost unnoticed and tends to be considered a problem,
then it becomes an important part of earning additional income and it
can even be estimated that if the shell is successfully sold then it is
sufficient to cover the operational costs of the palm oil mill.
Certainly something interesting if the production of CPO (crude palm
oil) with 0% operational costs so that profit is increasingly attractive
especially amid the recent decline in CPO prices.
Another thing that can be done is to use a pyrolysis unit, to run the
boiler. With pyrolysis, not only fiber is used but also the empty fruit
bunch (EFB). EFB are solid palm oil mill waste which to date have
generally not been utilized. Besides producing energy, pyrolysis also
produces products in the form of charcoal (biochar). Although
charcoal (biochar)
can also be used for energy sources, but in the business of palm oil
companies the use of biochar for plantations can be more compatible. The
use of biochar in palm oil plantations is mainly to fertilizer saving,
which is one of the major cost components (around 30%) in the CPO
production business. With an area of 20 thousand hectares of oil palm
plantations, fertilizer costs are estimated to reach Rp. 71.50 billion
(around US$ 5 million) per year or Rp. 35.75 billion (around US$ 2.5
million) per year for every 10,000 hectares, for more details, please
read
here.
Palm oil mills with big vision certainly try to maximize their
potential with the aim of maximizing profits from upstream to downstream
production activities. With Biochar can also target the increase in
productivity of FFB, for more details, please read
here.
The application of biochar will be easier to do in Indonesia than in
Malaysia, this is because almost all palm oil mills in Indonesia also
have palm oil plantations while in Malaysia the mills generally do not
have their own palm oil plantations. The palm oil industry also has an
important role for the two countries because Indonesia and Malaysia are
the largest CPO producers and owners of biggest palm oil plantations in
the world today. The palm oil industry contributes around 7% of
Malaysian GDP and 3% of Indonesian GDP, so its role cannot be ignored.
Both with pyrolysis and high efficient boilers, biomass waste can be
used as an energy source and 100% of the PKS can be commercialized, but
with
pyrolysis
is better because waste of EFB can also be processed, there are biochar
product (while only ash if only with regular combustion) for
Fertilizers saving in the palm oil plantations and the exhaust gases
from the palm oil mill boilers are also clean because they burn gas
(syngas) produced from the pyrolysis process.
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