Problems and Prospects of Rice Mill Modernization - A Case Study

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Journal of Assam University, Vol.-1, No.1, pp. 22-28, 1996.

PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS OF RICE MILL MODERNIZATION


A CASE STUDY

Purusottam Nayak*

INTRODUCTION

India is the second biggest rice producing country in the world after China. It
contributes about 20 percent of the world output of rice. Paddy being the major cereal
crop of India covers an area of more than 42.8 million hectares, the largest under any
single crop (FAO, 1995). It has been stated by the Department of Agriculture,
Government of India that in 1985-86 production of paddy was of the order of 96 million
tonnes which was increased to 115 million tonnes in 1995-96 and is expected to increase
to 130 million tonnes by year 2000. It is grown in almost all the provinces of the country
but more than 86 percent of the total production accounts for the States of Andhra
Pradesh, West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Orissa, Madhya Pradesh,
Punjab and Assam. Rice production, processing and marketing constitute the biggest
industry in the country. Indian rice milling industry is the oldest and largest agro-based
industry. The annual production of paddy was estimated at over 521 million tonnes,
mostly in developing countries and the amount is rising at an average rate of 3 percent
per annum (FAO, 1995). It was, however, the serious food crisis in the early sixties
which highlighted the need for a proper policy towards the industry. This led to joint
study of the industry by the Government of India and the Ford Foundation of India. The
study pointed out that the overall supply of rice could be augmented substantially with
additional yield obtained through modernization of the existing rice processing
techniques. A number of studies were also undertaken and came out with the same
findings. As a result, the policy of modernization of rice mills in India has since then
been pursued by the Government of India and various States within it. Thus, the industry
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* Reader, Department of Economics, Assam University, Silchar, Assam, India.

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Journal of Assam University, Vol.-1, No.1, pp. 22-28, 1996.

has become fairly modernized and more important in the economy of the country.
However, it is still believed that this has not been successfully implemented in most parts
of the country. Thus, with higher priority being given to paddy production programmes
and the changing pattern of demand for rice, the milling industry has to adopt itself to the
developing nation.
Rice milling in India is carried out in small and medium size rice mills. Most of
the small size mills are huller mills. Other various types are Battery of Huller mills,
Huller-cum-Sheller mills, Sheller mills and modern mills. The numbers of rice mills of
different types existing in country are as follows:

Types of Rice Mills* Number of Rice Mills

Huller Mills 78,309

Sheller Mills 4586

Huller-cum-Sheller Mills 10,384

Modern Mills 31,068


* For details see Table 1.

Huller mills have the advantage of being cheap and simple to operate but are very
inefficient in converting paddy into rice. The rice recovery in huller type will be 60-68
percent with 10-25 percent broken whereas 68-72 percent recovery with 5-7 percent
broken in modern type. It is a noticeable fact that the modern mills give the highest yield
of rice with least broken and better quality of by-products. Normally the huller mills yield
bran having lowest oil content as it contains appreciable amount of husk and broken rice.
But the oil content in bran from Sheller and modern mills are far better in this respect.

LEGISLATIVE MEASURES
The Rice Milling Industry (Regulation and Licensing) Act now in force provides
that:

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Journal of Assam University, Vol.-1, No.1, pp. 22-28, 1996.

a. The new rice mills to be set up will undertake dehusking of paddy


separately by rubber roll Sheller or centrifugal dehusker and shall have
paddy separators and cleaners in addition to the polisher;
b. All the existing mills excepting single hullers shall be modernized; and
c. Promotional efforts in the form of technical assistance, concessional
finance, subsidy for modernization, extension programmes, training,
research and development etc.

MAJOR PROBLEMS FACED BY THE INDUSTRY


The major problems faced by the industry are heterogeneity in the composition of
rice milling industry. Large variations are found in type, capacity, location, services
rendered as well as in ownership of different processing units. Consequently investment
requirement, cost and return also vary over a wide range. Heterogeneity in rice milling
industry arise mainly from the widely varying economic activities made available to
private rice millers in different areas and sectors of the country. Another common feature
of rice milling industry is considered that its technical potential capacity is not fully
utilized and this is because of the seasonal concentration and spatial spread of paddy
production coupled with the existence of a number of diverse processing units competing
with one another in supplying facilities. As these small mills generally do not purchase
and store paddy on their own, their operations tend to be restricted to the paddy
marketing season, and their installed capacity remained unutilized/underutilized during
the rest of the period of the year.

PROBLEMS FACED IN GENERAL


It is estimated about 10 percent of paddy/rice is damaged and/or lost in
processing, storage and transport with the present methods and machinery. Sixty to eighty
percent head yield is obtained with 10-25 broken and admixture of bran and husk
whereas with modern techniques, 68-72 percent head rice with 5-7 percent broken and
better utilizable by-products. The estimated loss in terms of money due to ill rice
recovery and excess broken etc with present methods would run into crore of rupees.
Since paddy is the staple food of practically all paddy growers and also it is
seasonal with one harvest per year, there should be some facility in storage which can be

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Journal of Assam University, Vol.-1, No.1, pp. 22-28, 1996.

protected from various hazards like damage caused due to spontaneous heating, damage
by birds, rodents and insects.

PROBLEMS IN PARBOILING AND DRYING


Parboiling of paddy, a process of partial boiling or cooking prior to milling which
imparts an extra strength to the rice kernel so that it could withstand the milling stress and
result in higher head yield. This significant increase in the hardness of the kernel results
due to gelatinization of the starch during parboiling and the disrupted protein which
expanded and occupied all the air spaces in the endosperm.
Research on food value of rice has shown that parboiled rice has more nutritive
value than the raw rice because of the migration of vitamins from outer layers of the rice
kernel into the inner starchy endosperm due to moisture heat treatment. Moreover, due to
better milling quality, the losses of broken and fines into the bran are reduced
considerably in the milling process of parboiled rice, and hence, total rice outturn of 72-
73 percent (2-8 percent more than the raw rice) and whole rice outturn of 60-65 percent
(20-30 percent more than raw rice) are obtained. This is perhaps the easiest and cheapest
method of attaining the self-sufficiency in meeting the growing demand for rice.
Loss of rice due to inefficient drying method is also not insignificant. Sun drying
is the most popular and traditional method of drying. This method is completely
dependent upon weather and it needs specially constructed large floor area that restricts
the capacity of a mill to a certain extent. Excessive losses will occur due to scattering,
birds, rodents etc. This can be improved by drying paddy in a mechanical dryer using
husk as burning fuel.

PROBLEMS IN BY-PRODUCTS
Bran obtained in milling is a part of the rice kernel and as such is quite rich in fat.
Polished rice contains 0.3 percent fat whereas brown rice contains about 2.2 percent fat
on a moisture free basis. Rice bran contains 20 percent extractible but the bran produced
in commercial mills usually contains 13-18 percent extractible. The quantity of bran if
totally extracted for the oil in it, is capable of producing 7.17 lakh tonnes of edible rice
bran oil. Thus, if this total potential is exploited, enough oil would be available to curtail

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Journal of Assam University, Vol.-1, No.1, pp. 22-28, 1996.

a major portion of the import of edible oils required to fill up the ever widening gap
between the demand and supply of edible oils in the country.
Rice husk is the largest by-product of rice milling industry which amounts to 22-
24 percent of the total paddy. The heating value of husk has been reported to be 3000-
3500 Kcal/kg. Thus, husk can be used for generating steam for parboiling paddy and as
heat source mechanical dryers. Twenty kg of husk can generate 60,000-70,000 Kcal
which would be enough to reduce the moisture content of one tonne of paddy from 20 to
14 percent. It can be used as fuel in domestic stoves and as a soil conditioner or a diluents
component in commercial mixed fertilizers. It can also be used as an abrasive material
because of its high silica content. Husk ash is used in glass industry for polishing. Rice
husk can be directly used as a loose insulating material in building and cold storage
facilities. Success has been achieved in the use of husk ash for manufacturing cement.
Pure silicon which is used for making semiconductors is a very costly material that can
be obtained from rice husk. Boards and briquettes can also be produced from rice husk.
Therefore, there is an urgent need of modernizing the methods and machinery by
new innovations and popularizing the new innovations and the new techniques of paddy
processing such as parboiling, drying, milling, handling, storage, transport and by-
product utilization to reduce the substantial losses. In order to substantiate the argument a
case study was undertaken in the Midnapur district of West Bengal by IIT Kharagpur
(RESC, 1982-83). On the basis of survey data collected, the past population of rice mills
in the district was found to be 110 out of which only 29 were in position to function. The
number of solvent extraction units was three whose capacities ranged from 4 to 6 tonnes
of bran oil per day. Out of an estimated annual average amount of 9 million tonnes of
paddy produced in West Bengal, Midnapur alone had a big share of 2 million tonnes. The
amount of paddy kept for seeds was 10 percent, 11.1 percent was milled by modern mills,
2.9 percent by huller mills and the rest 76 percent of paddy was husked by either licensed
or unlicensed husking mills (under runner disc Sheller). In other words, amount of paddy
milled by modern mills, huller mills and husking mills were 0.222, 0.058 and 1.520
million tonnes respectively. Amount of paddy kept for seeds was 0.20 million tonne out
of a total production of 2 million tonnes in the district.

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Journal of Assam University, Vol.-1, No.1, pp. 22-28, 1996.

Under the above mentioned conditions, rice produced by modern mills was 0.161
million tonne and that produced by huller and husking mills collectively was 1.0257
million tonnes per year. Had the total paddy produced in the district been milled by only
modern mills, then rice production would have been 1.303 million tonnes instead of the
present 1.187 million tonnes. Thus the district is losing 0.118 million tonne of rice worth
24.25 crore of rupees per year at Government fixed rates of rice. If the total bran
available in the district could be utilized for edible oil production, it would have produced
23,760 tonnes of bran oil worth 22.57 crore of rupees every year. Similarly, if the total
amount of husk and paddy straw were put to heat energy generation, it could have
produced an estimated amount of 4.752 X 1012 Kcal per year. Thus, it can be said that
modern rice mills are more productive than the single huller mills. However, some people
are of the opinion that since modern mills are capital intensive in nature, it cannot be a
good solution for a country where there exists both unemployment and
underemployment. In order to break this myth and to establish on the contrary that
modernization of rice mills increases the employment potential per unit of paddy milled
through direct employment and employment generated in subsidiary industries, a detailed
estimate of the comparison of modern mills with that of huller mills for the whole West
Bengal State has been presented in Table 2 on the basis of the case study conducted in the
Midnapur district.
Table 2 reveals that the modern rice milling system in addition to being self-
sufficient in energy, employs additional 4.0179 labours per tonne of paddy processed,
yields 3.5 lakh tonnes of additional rice worth 10.5 million rupees and produces 4.2 lakh
tonnes of pure rice bran which can partially yield 84,000 tonnes of bran oil in West
Bengal. Additional products of modern rice mill which are of considerable economic
value are cement and silicon from paddy husk, animal feed and chemicals like sodium
silicate, furfural etc. All these products can be economically manufactured from by-
products of milling industry providing additional income, employment and overall
prosperity to the State economy.

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Journal of Assam University, Vol.-1, No.1, pp. 22-28, 1996.

PRESENT STATUS OF RICE MILLING INDUSTRY IN MIDNAPUR DISTRICT

In order to know the present status of rice milling industry in Midnapur district a
case study was undertaken in the year 1986-87 by the RESC, PHTC, IIT Kharagpur on
the basis of questionnaire supplied by the Department of Food, Ministry of Food and
Civil Supplies, Govt. of India. It was found that there were 21 licensed mills which were
functioning. Out of these 21 mills 18 were surveyed by personal interview method by the
author and the data were analyzed. The result showed that all the rice mills were running
their mills for trading purposes only. Modernization of rice mills started in the district in
1970; so far only four those were fully modernized and the rest were in the process of
modernization. Seventy eight percent of the rice mills surveyed were found to be having
rubber-roll-Sheller, 6 percent discs Sheller, 10 percent battery of hullers and the rest 6
percent double hullers. About 89 percent of the rice mills had adopted local/traditional
method of parboiling paddy and the rest by CFTRI parboiling method and pressure
parboiling. Only three rice mills were having mechanical dryers for drying their parboiled
paddy whereas all others were using the conventional method of drying paddy, i.e., sun
drying. The bran produced from different mills having rubber-roll-Sheller was sold to the
solvent extraction plants in the district which were four in numbers. Almost all the rice
millers were aware of the modern equipments used in rice mills. Even though they
believed that modernization was economical, they had not been able to procure and use
all the modern equipments due to financial constraint. Only in case of few rice mills non-
availability of power supply was found to be the stumbling block for modernization. The
millers were quite confident of modernizing their mills if they were provided with
financial assistance, technical advice, electricity, concessions in the present levy system
and marketing facilities for products and by-products.

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Journal of Assam University, Vol.-1, No.1, pp. 22-28, 1996.

Table 1
NUMBER OF RICE MILLS IN INDIA
(As on 1.1.1987)

Sl. State/ U.T. Huller Sheller Huller- Modern Total


No. cum-Sheller
1 Andhra Pradesh 5386 1387 3999 7763 18535
2 Assam 931 1 2350 1363 4645
3 Bihar 4749 63 9 51 4872
4 Gujarat 2105 132 260 1095 3592
5 Haryana 1175 234 - 990 2399
6 Himachal Pradesh 1175 2 - 40 1217
7 Karnataka 8670 973 1697 10186 21526
8 Kerala 11872 4 12 1286 13174
9 Madhya Pradesh 3114 239 227 94 3674
10 Maharashtra 6133 389 897 2091 9510
11 Manipur 71 - 97 1 169
12 Meghalaya 85 - 8 - 93
13 Orissa 3050 34 220 674 3978
14 Punjab 4374 304 15 1988 6681
15 Rajasthan 236 108 6 - 350
16 Tamil Nadu 16690 74 311 1959 19034
17 Tripura 689 5 8 1 703
18 Uttar Pradesh 5707 562 150 1215 7634
19 West Bengal 1151 55 110 161 1477
20 Chandigarh 18 11 - 27 56
21 Dadra & N. Haveli 11 1 - 25 37
22 Delhi 48 - - 40 88
23 Goa, Daman & Diu 666 - 8 9 683
24 Pondicherry 203 8 - 9 220

ALL INDIA TOTAL 78309 4586 10384 31068 124347

Note: The States/Union Territories not mentioned are not having rice mils.

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Journal of Assam University, Vol.-1, No.1, pp. 22-28, 1996.

Table 2
COMPARISON OF SINGLE HULLER MILL AND MODERN RICE MILL IN WEST BENGAL

Sl. Item Single Modern


No. Huller Mill Mill

1 Capacity (tonnes per hour) 0.70 2.00

2 Units Required for West Bengal (Nos.) 6250 2188

3 a) Power Requirement (Horse power per huller/mill) 17 85

b) Power Requirement for West Bengal 106250* 185980


**

4 a) Labour Requirement (no. of labourers per huller/mill) 2 70

b) No. of Labourers Required for West Bengal 12500 153160

c) Rate of Employment (man days/tonne of paddy)

5 a) Rice Production (million tonnes) 4.55 4.90

b) Value of Rice (rupees in crore) 1365 14700

c) Husk-Bran Mixture Production (million tonnes) 2.55 Nil

d) Value of Husk-Bran Mixture (rupees in crore) 98 Nil

e) Pure Bran Production (million tonnes) Nil 0.42

f) Value of Pure Bran (rupees in crore) Nil 84

g) Husk Production (million tonnes) Nil 1.54

h) Value of Husk (rupees in crore) Nil 35.9

i) Broken and Fines Production (million tonnes) Nil 0.14

j) Value of Broken and Fines (rupees in crore) Nil 8.4

TOTAL INCOME GENERATION (rupees in crore) 1463 1598.3

* Mostly provided by electric or diesel engines.


** Mostly by steam engines from the husk produced in rice mills.

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Journal of Assam University, Vol.-1, No.1, pp. 22-28, 1996.

REFERENCES

1. Basu, A.K. (1966): Mechanization of Rice Parboiling Process, Seminar on


Modern Technology of Rice Milling, EIRMA, p.11.
2. Faulkner, M.D., Reed, G.N. and Brown, D.D. (1969): Report to the Government
of India on Increasing Milling Outturns of Rice from Paddy in India, September.
Quoted by J.E. Wimberley, Evaluation of Modern Rice Milling Program in India,
The Ford Foundation, New Delhi, October, p.1.
3. Food and Agricultural Organization (1969): Rice milling Industry in Developing
Countries, Case Studies and Some Aspects of Economic Policies, Commodity
Bulletin Series, Rome, p.1.
4. Food and Agricultural Organization (1995): FAOSTAT, Agricultural Data,
United Nations; http://faostat.fao.org/faostat/collections?subset=agriculture
5. Government of India: Rice Milling Industry in India- Prospect for the Fourth Five
Year Plan, Department of Food, Ministry of Food and Agriculture, New Delhi.
6. Gupta, H.P. (1966): Rice Bran, Seminar on Modern Technology of Rice
Milling, EIRMA, p.27.
7. Mukherjee, K.K. (1984): Rice Milling Industry Modernization and Government
Policy, Seminar at PHTC, IIT Kharagpur.
8. R.E.S.C (1983): Annual Report 1982-83, Post Harvest Technology Centre, IIT
Kharagpur, p.1.
9. R.E.S.C. (1986): Evaluation Committee Report, 1981-85, Post Harvest
Technology Centre, IIT Kharagpur.
10. Sarda, P.S. (1966): Modernization of Rice Milling, Seminar on Modern
Technology of Rice Milling, EIRMA, p.20, 85 and 86.

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