Full Seed-to-Bottle Reference — Equipment, Material Balance & Costs

Complete Oil Production Line — Seed to Bottled Oil

A complete edible oil production line has 12 stages from raw seed receiving to packaged oil. This guide documents every stage: what equipment is needed, what parameters to maintain, what quality to check, and the material flow — illustrated with a real 30 TPD soybean plant example.

Stages: 12
Reference plant: 30 TPD Soybean
Energy data: 139–223 kWh/tonne

Complete line summary: Seed receiving + storage → pre-cleaning → seed cleaning → conditioning → pressing → crude filtration → crude storage → degumming → neutralizing → bleaching → deodorizing → finished oil storage → packaging. 12 stages. Energy: 150–250 kWh electricity per tonne of refined oil produced. A 30 TPD soybean plant produces 5,055 kg refined oil + 23,500 kg protein meal per day.

Complete Production Line Overview

The 12-stage flow below shows how raw seed becomes finished bottled oil. Material moves through each stage in sequence — any bottleneck or undersized stage will constrain the entire line's output.

Raw Seeds Pre-Cleaning Seed Cleaning Conditioning Pressing Crude Filtration Crude Storage Degumming Neutralizing Bleaching Deodorizing Packaging
Seed prep section Pressing section Refinery section Packaging
📷 Complete 30 TPD oil production line — seed intake through pressing, refinery, and packaging hall Aerial view of complete industrial edible oil production facility, seed intake, processing building with screw presses, refinery tower, finished oil storage tanks, packaging hall, professional industrial photography
Complete Edible Oil Production LineEnd-to-end edible oil production line: oilseeds are cleaned, conditioned, mechanically pressed, and the crude oil is filtered, then refined (degummed, neutralized, bleached, deodorized) and packaged; press cake/meal is recovered as a protein by-product. Complete Edible Oil Production LineSeedcleaningremove dust,stones, metalConditioning/ cookingheat & moisturefor max yieldMechanicalpressingscrew/expellerpresses out oilCrude oilfilteringremove finesolids / footsRefining(RBD)degum→neutralize→bleach→deodorizePackaging& storagebottling, filling,bulk tanksOilseeds in →Press cake / meal
A complete edible-oil production line — from seed cleaning through pressing, filtering and refining to packaging, with press cake recovered as meal.

Stages 1–3: Seed Receiving, Storage & Cleaning

1
Raw Material Receiving & Storage
TQLZ80 screen, intake scale, storage silos

All incoming seed must be tested for moisture, visually inspected for mould, and weighed for inventory control. Store with a 5–10 day buffer (150–500 tonnes for a 30 TPD plant) to protect against supply disruptions.

Moisture limit<12%
Storage temp<18°C
Buffer stock5–10 days
RotationFIFO
2
Pre-Cleaning (Scalping)
Rotary drum pre-cleaner

Removes large debris: straw, stones above 20mm, clumps, packaging material. Typically 2–5% of incoming weight is separated at this stage. Prevents large foreign objects from entering the vibrating screen and causing damage.

3
Seed Cleaning
TQLZ80 + TQSx + TCXT25 + air aspirator

Four-step cleaning process ensuring 99%+ clean, metal-free seed reaches the conditioner:

  • Vibrating screen (TQLZ80): 3-mesh layer separates by size — oversized, correct-sized, and undersized material
  • Destoner (TQSx): Gravity-density separation removes stones (seeds: 0.6 g/cm³, stones: 1.5–2.5 g/cm³)
  • Magnetic separator (TCXT25): Removes ferrous metal to <0.5 ppm Fe — critical to prevent press screw damage from nails, wire fragments
  • Air aspirator: Pneumatically removes chaff, dust, light material

Stages 4–5: Conditioning & Pressing

4
Conditioning / Cooking
LYZF1.0 vertical stack cooker, steam injection

Conditioning is frequently underestimated — but correct conditioning can improve press yield by 1–3% while wrong conditioning causes significant yield loss. The conditioner denatures seed proteins (releasing bound oil), reduces oil viscosity, deactivates lipase enzyme (preventing rancidity during processing), and ruptures remaining intact oil cells.

Temperature80–110°C
Moisture adjust9–12%
Residence time15–40 min
Decks3–5 stack
5
Oil Pressing
6YL-180 screw oil presses × 4 (30 TPD)

The screw press is the mechanical heart of the plant. At 30 TPD capacity, four 6YL-180 presses run in parallel (each 8–10 TPD, operating 16 hours/day). The press barrel reaches 115–130°C through friction heat and external heating.

Barrel temp115–130°C
Feed rate/press7–10 TPD
Residual oil in cake5–8%
Crude oil FFA1–3%
Video: a turnkey oilseed extraction and refining line (third-party demonstration).

Video: a turnkey oilseed extraction and refining line (third-party demonstration).

Stages 6–8: Crude Oil Handling

6
Crude Oil Filtration
Settling tanks + BASY-500 plate filter press

Freshly pressed crude oil contains meal fines (0.5–2% by weight) that must be removed before refining. Gravity settling for 2–4 hours removes heavy solids. Plate filter press removes fine particles to <100 ppm suspended solids.

Filter pressure100–400 psi
Filter cloth1–5 μm
Oil temp40–60°C
Output solids<100 ppm
7
Crude Oil Storage
Carbon steel / SS304 tanks with N₂ blanketing

Filtered crude oil is held in nitrogen-blanketed storage tanks as a buffer between the pressing line and refinery. Nitrogen blanketing (<2% O₂ headspace) prevents oxidation and FFA rise during storage. Maximum storage: 2–4 weeks before peroxide value increases significantly.

Storage temp8–20°C
N₂ headspace<2% O₂
Max storage2–4 weeks
8
Degumming (first refinery stage)
DG-2000 degumming vessel

See the full degumming process in the How to Refine Edible Oil guide. Production line integration note: degumming should follow crude storage without delay — crude oil quality declines with storage time as phospholipids become increasingly non-hydratable.

Stages 9–12: Refining

Stages 9 (Neutralizing), 10 (Bleaching), and 11 (Deodorizing) follow the DBDW sequence documented in full detail in our How to Refine Edible Oil guide. Key integration points for the production line:

Critical sizing rule: Refinery throughput must be sized to handle 110–120% of pressing line crude output. The most common planning error is an undersized refinery that becomes the bottleneck, forcing the pressing line to run at reduced capacity. A 30 TPD soybean press producing 5.5T crude/day needs a minimum 2T/batch refinery running 3 cycles/day (6T/day capacity).

  • Heat recovery: Counter-current heat exchangers between Deodorizing (Stage 11) and Bleaching (Stage 10) pre-heat incoming bleached oil — saves 30–40% deodorizing fuel cost
  • Nitrogen blanketing: All finished oil storage tanks (SS304) must have nitrogen blanket — mandatory for export-quality shelf life and preventing oxidation
12
Packaging
Polishing filter + filling line + nitrogen flushing

Final polishing filter (0.5–1 μm) removes any remaining micro-particles before filling. Consumer lines (500 ml–2 L bottles) or bulk filling (20 L jerry cans, 200 L drums). Nitrogen flushing before capping extends shelf life to 18–24 months.

Polish filter0.5–1 μm
Headspace O₂<2%
Fill accuracy±2%
Shelf life18–24 months

Material Balance — 30 TPD Soybean Plant

This material balance table is the most-referenced data for plant design and financial modelling. Every input, output, and by-product stream is quantified for a standard 30 TPD soybean oil plant.

StreamTypeQuantity (kg/day)Notes
Raw soybean inputInput30,00018% average oil content
Cleaning lossesWaste−300Impurities, damaged seeds
Conditioned seedInternal29,700Feed to presses
Crude soybean oilOutput5,55018.7% yield, FFA 1–3%
Press cake (wet)Output24,15044–48% protein, for animal feed
Filtered crude oilInternal5,450After plate filter press
Degumming gumsBy-product150Crude lecithin (marketable)
Soapstock (neutralizing)By-product120For fatty acid refinery or soap
Spent bleaching earthWaste70~40% oil retained in earth
Deodorizer distillateBy-product55Tocopherol/vitamin E source
Refined soybean oilOutput5,05516.9% overall yield
44–48% protein mealOutput23,500Primary by-product revenue

Revenue Calculation at Current Commodity Prices

Refined Oil Revenue $6,066/day 5,055 kg × $1.20/kg
Protein Meal Revenue $6,580/day 23,500 kg × $0.28/kg
Lecithin & Distillate $120/day By-products
Raw Seed Cost −$12,600/day 30T × $420/T
Operating Costs −$600/day Energy, labour, consumables
Net Daily Margin ~Break-even At commodity prices — premium market access or lower seed cost needed for profit

Key insight: At commodity prices, 30 TPD soybean is essentially break-even. Profitability requires: (1) premium retail oil pricing above commodity ($1.20/kg) — local brand retail can achieve $1.80–2.50/kg; (2) lower seed cost through direct farm contracts; or (3) scale above 50 TPD where fixed cost per tonne decreases significantly.

Energy Consumption

Per tonne of refined soybean oil produced at 30 TPD scale. Use these figures for utility connection planning and operating cost modelling.

Process SectionElectricity (kWh/tonne)Steam (kg/tonne)
Seed cleaning + conveying8–12
Conditioning5–8120–180
Pressing (4× 6YL-180)35–50
Crude filtration3–5
Degumming5–840–60
Neutralizing + washing8–1280–120
Bleaching6–1050–80
Deodorizing65–110200–350
Packaging4–8
Total139–223 kWh/tonne490–790 kg/tonne
$11–18 Electricity cost/tonne oil (@$0.08/kWh)
$15–30 Steam cost/tonne oil (LPG/natural gas)
$26–48 Total energy cost/tonne refined oil
30–40% Fuel saving from deodorizer heat recovery

Quality Control Checkpoints

These are the mandatory QC tests at each production stage. Without a systematic QC programme, refinery output quality is unpredictable and food safety certification is impossible.

StageTestMethodTarget
Seed receivingMoisture, visual, FFAMoisture meter, titration<12% moisture, clean, no mould
Post-cleaningCleanliness, metalVisual, metal detector99% clean, metal-free
Post-pressingFFA, colour, sedimentTitration, Lovibond, visualFFA <3%, <100 ppm solids
Post-degummingPhosphorus (ppm)Colorimetric test<200 ppm P
Post-neutralizingFFA, residual soapTitrationFFA <0.1%, soap-free
Post-bleachingColour, Peroxide ValueLovibond, titration<10Y/1R, PV <5
Post-deodorizingFFA, PV, colour, odourFull lab analysisFFA <0.05%, PV <0.5, neutral
PackagingHeadspace O₂, fill volume, sealO₂ analyser, scale, visual<2% O₂, ±2% fill, 100% seal

Complete Equipment List — 30 TPD Soybean Plant

Reference equipment list for planning and procurement. Quantities for 30 TPD pressing + batch refinery + packaging.

#EquipmentModelQtyPurpose
1Vibrating cleaning screenTQLZ801Size-based impurity removal
2DestonerTQSx1Stone removal by density
3Magnetic separatorTCXT251Ferrous metal removal
4Vertical cooker/conditionerLYZF1.01Steam conditioning
5Screw oil press6YL-1804Main mechanical pressing
6Plate filter pressBASY-5001Crude oil clarification
7Crude oil storage tanks (5T)CS tank2Crude oil buffer storage
8Degumming vessel (2T)DG-20001Phospholipid removal
9Neutralizing vessel (2T)NT-20001FFA removal with NaOH
10Washing/dehydration vessel (2T)WD-20001Residual soap removal
11Bleaching vessel (2T)BL-20001Colour and trace removal
12Deodorizing vessel (2T)DO-20001Volatile compound removal
13Niagara/plate filterNF-10001Spent bleaching earth removal
14Vacuum pump2BV-51311Process vacuum for deodorizing
15Steam generatorWNS-0.5T/h1Process steam supply
16Heat exchangerPlate HX2Heat recovery between stages
17PLC control panelSiemens S71Process automation & monitoring
18Finished oil storage tanks (10T)SS3042Refined oil storage with N₂ blanketing
19Nitrogen blanketing system1Oxidation prevention in storage

Phased Investment Approach

For first-time investors, a phased build reduces initial risk and uses early cash flow to fund each expansion stage:

Phase 1
Press + Filtration
$25,000–$50,000

Pressing line only. Sell crude oil to local refineries or traders. Generates immediate cash flow with minimal capital and fast payback.

Phase 2
Add Batch Refinery
+$15,000–$30,000

DBDW refinery unit added to pressing line. Begin selling retail-grade refined oil at 2–3× crude oil price. Cash flow from Phase 1 funds this investment.

Phase 3
Packaging + Scale-Up
+$20,000–$60,000

Add consumer packaging line and/or expand pressing capacity based on proven market demand. Branded retail oil achieves highest margins.

Frequently Asked Questions

For a complete 30 TPD soybean oil plant (pressing + refinery + storage): approximately 600–900 m² for the main processing building (minimum ceiling height: 6m for press area, 7–8m for refinery area to accommodate the tall deodorizing vessel). Additional needs: seed storage building (150–300 m²), finished oil warehouse (100–200 m²), utility room — steam generator, compressors, electrical room (50–80 m²), and access areas. Total site: typically 1,500–2,500 m² including all ancillary areas. Our free plant design service creates a layout optimized for your available building within 48 hours.

The screw oil press is the heart of the plant — everything flows from its output. However, the most commonly undersized or underbudgeted component is the refinery, specifically the deodorizing vessel. An inadequate deodorizer (insufficient vacuum, too short residence time, wrong temperature) produces oil with lingering off-flavours that retail customers reject. Second most critical: the vacuum pump. If vacuum drops from 2 mbar to 15 mbar during deodorizing, temperature must increase 15–20°C to compensate — causing colour darkening and potential trans-fat formation. Invest in a quality vacuum pump and maintenance programme.

Yes, and we recommend it for first-time investors. Phase 1: Pressing + filtration only. Sell crude oil to buyers. Revenue generates cash flow. Cost: $25,000–$50,000. Phase 2: Add batch refinery. Start selling retail-grade refined oil. Incremental cost: $15,000–$30,000. Phase 3: Add bottling line or expand pressing capacity based on market demand. This phased approach reduces initial risk, lets you build operational experience, and uses cash flow to fund each expansion rather than requiring all capital upfront.

Pressing section: 3–4 operators (1 per press pair + 1 for feeding and monitoring). Filtration and crude oil section: 1 operator. Refinery (batch): 2–3 operators per shift for batch monitoring, chemical dosing, and filter press operation. Quality control: 1 person part-time (testing, records). Maintenance: 1 mechanic (shared with other plant functions). Management: 1 plant supervisor. Total: 8–11 people for a 30 TPD plant running 16 hours/day in two shifts. For 24/7 operation, multiply shift staffing by 3 and add night differential pay.

Undersizing the refinery relative to the pressing line. We see this repeatedly: a 30 TPD pressing line (producing 5.5 tonnes crude oil/day) paired with a 1.5T/batch refinery (can process maximum 4.5 tonnes/day in 3 cycles). The pressing line sits idle for hours while the refinery catches up. Rule: Size your refinery capacity at 110–120% of your pressing line's crude oil output. A 30 TPD soybean plant producing 5.5T crude/day needs a 2T/batch refinery (3 cycles = 6T/day) minimum. Second most common: no nitrogen blanketing on finished oil storage — accelerating oxidation and reducing shelf life before packaging.