
The Elaeis guineensis is native to West Africa, and its relationship with humans dates back thousands of years. However, it was in Southeast Asia that Elaeis guineensis became a cash crop. At that time, colonial companies introduced oil palm to Southeast Asia and established the first plantations there. Today, these plantations have expanded into a dominant feature of the local landscape. Today, approximately 83% of palm oil comes from Indonesia and Malaysia. More than 40 countries also produce palm oil, in much smaller quantities but growing rapidly. Thailand accounts for 4% of total production, and the main producers in South America and Africa are Colombia (2%) and Nigeria (2%).
The largest importers of palm oil are India (18% of the global total), China (14%) and the European Union (11%), with Pakistan also an increasingly important import market (7%). Looking at the situation by continent, Asia's palm oil imports accounted for 58.4% of total international trade, Europe accounted for 20.9%, Africa accounted for 13.3%, and other continents accounted for 7.4%. Indonesia is also increasingly using its own palm oil. In 2022, its domestic consumption will be approximately 18 million tons (accounting for approximately 45% of Indonesia's total production). More than half of this is used to produce biodiesel and petrochemicals.

Elaeis guineensis is a miracle crop. It produces 4-10 times more oil per hectare than other oil crops such as soybeans or coconut trees. The Elaeis guineensis planting area only accounts for 9% of the world's 322 million hectares of oil planting area, but the oil production accounts for 36% of the global vegetable oil production. This makes growing oil palm an efficient and profitable land use. The economic value of palm oil translates into jobs, infrastructure and tax revenue. In Indonesia and Malaysia, almost 4.5 million people make a living directly from the palm oil industry. In Indonesia alone, more than 20 million people, or 7% of its total population, rely indirectly on palm oil production for their livelihoods. All this means that, done right, palm oil can play an important role in reducing poverty.
Because palm oil is different from other conventional oils, due to the particularity of the oil, ordinary conventional oil presses cannot press palm fruit, and a specially designed palm fruit oil press must be used. The small palm oil press is a single screw press with a processing capacity of 400-600 kilograms per hour. Due to its low price and high oil yield, this small palm oil press is popular with customers, especially African customers. They purchased this small palm oil press to replace the traditional oil press to improve the efficiency of palm oil crushing. Small palm oil presses can be equipped with motors or diesel engines according to customer needs.

The operation process and precautions of small palm oil press:
1.The raw material for oil extraction needs to be palm fruit. First separate the palm fruits from the fruit bunches.
2.It is necessary to cook the palm fruit in advance, which can make the pressing process easier and the oil yield rate is high.
3.Start the small palm oil press, and then put the palm fruit into the feed port of the small palm oil press for squeezing. During the pressing process, you need to manually adjust the pressure in the pressing chamber according to the pressing conditions.
4.After pressing you can get crude palm oil. If you have a filter, you can also filter the crude palm oil to get clearer crude palm oil.
This small palm oil press machine can be used both at home and in small palm oil production plants to produce palm oil.

The main parameters:
Model
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Specifications
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AY-Z50
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Weight: Motor about 310kg (diesel engine 330kg)
Size: 1200*550*1050mm
Output: 200-300kg/h
Power: 8HP diesel engine
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Details Picture:



