🇱🇰 Case Study — Colombo (Ja-Ela Industrial Zone), Sri Lanka

20 TPD Coconut Oil Plant in Sri Lanka — Colombo RBD Coconut Oil for Cosmetics & Food Industry

📅 Commissioned 2022 Dual-Grade: Cosmetics + Food ISO 22000 + GMP Lauric Acid 48.8%
📷 RBD Coconut Oil Plant — Colombo (Ja-Ela), Sri Lanka Premium RBD coconut oil processing plant in Sri Lanka Colombo, white/clear coconut oil in glass bottles, clean cosmetic-grade production environment, fresh coconuts, tropical industrial photography, pristine white facility
20 TPDCopra Input
9.5 TPDRBD Oil Output
47.5%Oil Yield
48.8%Lauric Acid
€5.50/kgCosmetics Grade Price
2022Year Commissioned

Project Overview

The Challenge

A Colombo coconut oil company needed to supply both the cosmetics industry (requiring completely odourless, pure white RBD coconut oil) and food manufacturing clients (cooking/baking grade) from a single plant. The two grades have different deodorising requirements — cosmetics grade demands 240°C for 3 hours to achieve complete odour removal; food grade is produced at 220°C for 1.5 hours retaining a very light coconut note.

The premium opportunity: cosmetics-grade RBD coconut oil commands €5.50/kg versus €1.80/kg for food-grade — nearly 3× the revenue on the same raw material. The challenge was achieving reliable, inspector-verified odourlessness for cosmetics grade while maintaining efficient production of food-grade volume.

The Solution

SinoOil designed a single-line plant with adjustable deodoriser parameters for two-grade production:

  • Copra pressing + full DBDW physical refinery producing high-quality crude coconut oil as the base for both grades
  • Two-mode deodoriser: Cosmetics mode — 240°C, 3 hours under 3 mbar vacuum; Food mode — 220°C, 1.5 hours under 3 mbar vacuum. Switchable at the PLC by the operator
  • SS316 throughout all product-contact surfaces — exceeding cosmetics ingredient supplier audit requirements
  • Dedicated separate storage tanks: 3T SS316 ×3 for cosmetics grade, 3T SS316 ×3 for food grade — clearly labelled, never mixed
  • Nitrogen blanketing on all storage tanks — essential for cosmetics grade to maintain peroxide value below 0.5 meq/kg at delivery
  • ISO 22000 + GMP certification supporting cosmetics ingredient customer audits
  • Panel odour testing protocol — every cosmetics-grade batch is checked by a 3-person organoleptic panel before release

Process Flow

Copra Receiving
(moisture test)
Hammer Crushing
Conditioning/
Cooking
Pressing
(6YL-180 ×3)
Plate Filter SS316
Crude CCO Storage
(heated, 35°C)
Degumming
Bleaching
(low earth dosage)
Deodorising
Cosmetics: 240°C/3h
Food: 220°C/1.5h
Separate Storage
Cosmetics vs Food
Odour Panel Test
(cosmetics grade)

Equipment List

#EquipmentModel / SpecificationQty
1Copra receiving + moisture testingMoisture meter, receiving bay1
2Copra hammer crusherHammer mill, 3T/h1
3Conditioner/cookerSteam jacketed, 100–105°C1
4Screw oil press6YL-180, ~7 TPD each3
5Plate filter SS316BASY-500, SS316 filter plates and frame1
6Crude coconut oil storage (heated, insulated)5T SS316, electric heating (coconut solidifies <24°C)2
7Degumming vesselSS316, 2T, phosphoric acid + hot water1
8Bleaching vesselSS316, 2T, vacuum 100 mbar, low dosage (coconut has low pigments)1
9Deodorising vessel (adjustable, 2-mode)SS316, 2T, 220–240°C adjustable, 3 mbar vacuum, 1.5–3h1
10Vacuum system2-stage steam ejectors + water-ring pump, 3 mbar1
11Cosmetics-grade storage tanks SS316 (separately labelled)3T SS316, N2 blanket, dedicated cosmetics use3
12Food-grade storage tanks SS316 (separately labelled)3T SS316, N2 blanket, dedicated food use3
13Nitrogen blanketing systemPSA N2 generator, 99.5% purity, all 14 tanks1
14Quality lab (lauric acid GC, odour panel, Lovibond)GC fatty acid analysis, Lovibond tintometer, odour panel booth1 set

Project Results

9.5 TPD
Total RBD Output
40% cosmetics / 60% food
Odourless
Cosmetics Grade
0 units organoleptic panel
48.8%
Lauric Acid
Premium Sri Lanka origin
€5.50/kg
Cosmetics Price
vs €1.80/kg food grade
ISO 22000
+ GMP Certified
Cosmetics ingredient compliant
5 clients
Supply Contracts
2 cosmetics + 3 food companies

"Sri Lanka produces some of the best coconuts in the world. My refinery converts that into premium RBD coconut oil for cosmetics at €5.50/kg — nearly 3× the food grade price. The two-grade production system from SinoOil was key. We switch between cosmetics and food mode by adjusting the deodorizer parameters."

— Managing Director, Colombo, Sri Lanka | April 2023

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between VCO, RBD coconut oil, and crude coconut oil?
The three main coconut oil grades differ in processing method and properties. Crude coconut oil (CCO): raw oil pressed from copra without refining. Dark colour, strong smoky/rancid odour, high FFA (3–8%), not suitable for direct consumption or cosmetics ingredient use. RBD coconut oil (Refined, Bleached, Deodorized): produced from copra through degumming, bleaching, and high-temperature deodorising (220–240°C). White or colourless, odourless (cosmetics grade) or lightly flavoured (food grade), FFA below 0.05%. The most common commercial coconut oil for cooking, baking, and cosmetics applications. Virgin coconut oil (VCO): produced from fresh coconut using cold-centrifuge or cold-press methods. Retains natural coconut flavour and aroma. No heat above 40°C. Premium pricing for health food market. Each grade has appropriate applications: crude CCO for soap/industrial use, RBD for food manufacturing and cosmetics, VCO for premium health food and personal care.
What are the specification differences between cosmetics-grade and food-grade RBD coconut oil?
Cosmetics-grade RBD coconut oil has more stringent specifications than food-grade for odour, colour, and moisture. Cosmetics grade (this Sri Lanka plant): completely odourless (0 units organoleptic panel), Lovibond colour below 0.5R (water-white/colourless), moisture below 0.1%, lauric acid above 48%, FFA below 0.05%, peroxide value below 0.5 meq/kg. Achieved by deodorising at 240°C for 3 hours. Food-grade: slight coconut flavour acceptable (up to 2 on aroma panel), Lovibond below 1R acceptable, same lauric acid, FFA, moisture standards. Achieved at 220°C for 1.5 hours. The two grades are kept completely separate through dedicated storage tanks labelled and physically separated, with dedicated nitrogen blanketing to maintain cosmetics grade's oxidation-free condition required by cosmetics manufacturers.
What is the lauric acid content of Sri Lankan coconut oil and why does it matter?
Sri Lankan coconut oil consistently achieves lauric acid content of 48–50% — among the highest globally for Cocos nucifera. Lauric acid (C12:0) is the medium-chain saturated fatty acid defining coconut oil's unique properties: it converts to monolaurin in the body with reported antiviral and antimicrobial properties; it contributes to coconut oil's solid state at room temperature (melt point approximately 24°C); and it is the primary active ingredient in hair care, skin care, and personal care formulations where lauric acid provides moisturising, antimicrobial, and film-forming properties. For cosmetics manufacturers, lauric acid content above 48% is a purchasing specification — Sri Lanka's consistently high lauric acid content (this plant achieved 48.8%) makes it a preferred origin for premium cosmetics ingredient supply compared to lower-lauric origins from other coconut-producing countries.
Why is nitrogen blanketing important for edible oil storage?
Nitrogen blanketing fills the headspace above stored oil with inert nitrogen gas (N2) rather than ambient air, preventing three types of quality degradation: oxygen contact — atmospheric oxygen is the primary cause of lipid oxidation (rancidity), increasing peroxide value and generating off-flavours and off-odours; moisture condensation — atmospheric humidity condensing in tank headspaces can contaminate oil and promote hydrolysis; and contaminant prevention — dust, microorganisms, and oxidative compounds in air are excluded. For cosmetics-grade RBD coconut oil, nitrogen blanketing is essential as cosmetics manufacturers specify peroxide value below 0.5 meq/kg at point of delivery — any oxygen contact during storage degrades this value. For food-grade oil, nitrogen blanketing extends shelf life from approximately 12 months (without N2) to 18–24 months (with N2) at ambient temperature storage. SinoOil's PSA nitrogen generator provides continuous 99.5% purity nitrogen supply for this plant's 14 storage tanks.
What are Sri Lanka coconut oil export market opportunities?
Sri Lanka is a well-established coconut oil exporter with a strong reputation for high-quality products. Key export market opportunities: EU cosmetics ingredient market — cosmetics-grade RBD coconut oil from Sri Lanka commands €5–6/kg, supplied to European personal care manufacturers for creams, soaps, shampoos, and cosmetics emulsifiers. Japan — premium VCO and RBD coconut oil for health food and traditional Japanese confectionery. India — import of RBD coconut oil to supplement Indian production during domestic shortages. US organic/natural personal care — growing demand for sustainably sourced coconut oil ingredients. The competitive challenge for Sri Lanka is raw material cost: Sri Lankan copra prices are higher than Philippine or Indonesian copra due to higher local wages and lower plantation productivity. This plant's two-grade strategy — premium cosmetics pricing for 40% of output (€5.50/kg) and food-grade volume for 60% (~€1.80/kg) — optimises total plant revenue, achieving a blended realisation of approximately €3.28/kg versus €1.80/kg for purely food-grade production.

Dual-Grade Coconut Oil Plants — Cosmetics & Food Grade from One Line

SinoOil designs RBD coconut oil plants with adjustable deodoriser parameters, separate storage infrastructure, and full documentation for both cosmetics ingredient (GMP, ISO 22000) and food-grade certification. Capacity 5 to 200 TPD.

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