Report prepared for ITC’s Market Insider by:
Mr Steve Caiger steve.caiger@highvaluehorticulture.com
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Market Insider
Essential Oils & Oleoresins – January 2016
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Firmenich announced coconut as its 2016 flavour of the year. According to the company, when coconut water hit the mass market between 2005 and 2008, the world took serious notice and since then, its presence in food and beverages has increased. Since 2010, the number of coconut flavored food and drink products increased by 104%, with an annual growth rate of 20%. The leading market categories tracked for coconut flavor launches in 2015 (YTD) include juice and juice drinks (13%), sweet biscuits/ cookies (10. 4%), cereal and energy bars (6%), and yogurt (4. 8%). Firmenich noted that the appeal of coconut probably lies in consumers’ attraction to the feelings of balance and wellbeing coconut evokes.
Coconut is a seed whose flavor can be described as anything from toasted and sweet, to creamy and lactonic, to fatty and fresh. As with most perennial favorites, this versatility is part of the appeal. One reason for the variety of coconut flavors is the variety of ways to consume it. “This new generation of coconut flavors in particular is modern and redefined, adding freshness and giving a different spin to products if compared to the wellestablished ‘classic coconut’ flavors,” said Gerry Van Gerven, senior flavorist at Firmenich, Thailand. "Coconut is also a great team player, happy to take a supporting flavor role. Great examples are coconut with vanilla, coffee and chilies, while fruits like pineapple, lychee and mango are great blenders for drink concepts." Van Gerven added that coconut flavors and fusions can also be applied beyond drinks, from bakery and confecti-onary, to dairy and savory.
Source: Firmenich
IFEAT runs an annual study tour, taking a group to a particular region of importance for essential oil and aromatics production. For 2016 the Study Tour will visit US states of Texas, Washington,
Michigan and Indiana. Participants will visit essential oil and oleoresin producers, processors, distributors and users of the major aromatic botanicals in the region. These include peppermint, spearmint, cedar wood and dill oils, hops and oleoresins. The timing of the tour (13-21 August) has been selected to match the major harvesting and processing seasons – it is the peak period for peppermint and spearmint for which the USA is one of the most important suppliers to the global market. These tours offer a unique opportunity to see the industry and meet those actively involved – a huge learning opportunity. More information is available from IFEAT.
Source: IFEAT
Givaudan is proudly marking a milestone in its journey to sustainable natural ingredients with an event celebrating ‘Ten years of Ethical Sourcing’ in Paris from 18 to 22 January 2016. The event showcases a selection of innov ations and inspirations among Givaudan’s key natural ingredients such as tonka beans from Venezuela, ylang ylang from Mohéli, vetiver from Haiti, patchouli from
Indonesia and cistus from Spain.
Givaudan began pioneering an ethical sourcing approach in the fragrance and flavours industry a decade ago. Starting out with partnerships with local producers, the Company today uses different sourcing models including its own collection networks. Givaudan’s Origination team creates a human chain from growers to consumers by deploying dedicated employees in the countries of origin, fostering best practices in sourcing and ensuring that producers and local communities benefit in the long-term from supplying the industry.
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Sourcing natural ingredients also provides new opportunities for creative stimulation and innovation.
Exploring raw materials at the source and combining them with ingredients obtained through the latest techniques such as bioscience has led to innovations like Akigalawood®, a new natural product derived from patchouli, and Roasted Tonka, an intense aroma obtained through an exclusive roasting process. These techniques provide Givaudan’s perfumers and flavourists new ways of working with naturals and further enrich the palette of over 200 of the highest quality natural ingredients that
Givaudan offers its customers, including sandalwood, tonka bean, benzoin, vanilla, ylang ylang, lavender, vetiver, patchouli and cistus.
“We are proud to mark this milestone in our journey to sustainable natural ingredients. By taking a long-term approach to securing the most fragile natural supply chains and supporting local communities, Givaudan is working to create a virtuous circle in line with our 2020 strategy of responsible growth and shared success for customers, communities and the Company,” said Gilles
Andrier, CEO.
Key highlights from the past ten years:
2006 – Kick-off for the pioneering of an ethical sourcing approach within Givaudan
2008 – Partnership for sustainable sandalwood oil in Western Australia
2008 – Project on biodiversity for tonka beans with Conservation International in Venezuela
2009 – Support to benzoin harvesting communities through secondary education in Laos
2010 – Rural development programme for vanilla farmers in Madagascar
2010 – Project on ylang ylang quality and environmental conservation in Mohéli, Comoros
2012 – Cooperative and research partnership to preserve lavender and lavandin in France
2013 – Partnership with farmer cooperative and distiller for organic and fair-trade vetiver oil in Haiti
2014 – Patchouli collection network in Sulawesi, Indonesia and farming partnership in Borneo,
Malaysia
2014 – Partnership with Biolandes for the sustainable production of cistus labdanum gum
2015 – Clove leaf oil collection network and partnership in Madagascar
Company’s long-term commitment to sustainable sourcing of natural ingredients is further reinforced by the actions of the Givaudan Foundation. Launched in 2014, the non-profit organisation is dedicated to improving the social conditions of local communities through programmes for education, health and protection of the environment.
About Givaudan
Givaudan is the global leader in the creation of fragrances and flavours. In close collaboration with food, beverage, consumer product and fragrance partners, Givaudan develops tastes and scents that delight consumers the world over. With a passion to understand consumers’ preferences and a relentless drive to innovate, Givaudan is at the forefront of creating fragrances and flavours that
‘engage your senses’. The company achieved sales of CHF 4.4 billion in 2014. Headquartered in
Switzerland with local presence in over 80 locations, the Company has more than 9,500 employees worldwide. Givaudan invites you to discover more at www.givaudan.com
.
Source: Givaudan
IFF has renewed its website – have a look; it’s interesting! And note how central sustainability and ethical sourcing is - this is increasingly common across the industry
Source: IFF
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Essential Oils & Oleoresins – January 2016
Kalsec®, Inc. announces that its Denver City, TX plant has achieved organic certification by Oregon
Tilth Certified Organic (OTCO), a leader in organic certification. Kalsec®’s Kalamazoo, Michigan manufacturing facility was organic certified by OTCO in 2015. The certification meets the United
States Department of Agriculture (USDA) National Organic Program (NOP) and European Union standards. “Achieving these organic certifications allows Kalsec® the ability to expand our naturallysourced ingredient portfolio to meet the increasing demand for cleaner label ingredients. This is an accomplishment of which all of our employees can be proud,” said Scott Nykaza, president and chief operating officer.
According to Innova Market Insights, almost one of ten global new packaged food and beverages made an organic claim last year. The Organic Trade Association indicated sales of organic food and non-food products in the United States broke through another record in 2014, totalling US$39.1 billion, up 11.3 percent from the previous year.
Kalsec®’s Denver City, TX facility specializes in the cultivation, harvest, dehydration and extraction of paprika, rosemary and carrot, as well as specialty herbs and spices. The facility leads the industry in innovative natural ingredient and sustainable processing practices with the manufacture of expeller pressed spice and herb extracts. Included in the expeller pressed product line are specialty pepper extracts such as ancho, capsicum, cayenne, chipotle, ghost, guajillo, habanero, jalapeno and pasilla.
Kalsec® is the leading global producer of natural spice and herb flavour extracts, colours, antioxidants, and advanced hop products for the food and beverage industry. For more than 50 years, Kalsec® has consistently delivered high-quality; innovative ingredient solutions that make products look better, taste better and last longer. Kalsec® is headquartered in Kalamazoo, Mich., with facilities in the United States, Europe and Asia. For more information, visit www.kalsec.com
.
Source: Kalsec
Researchers have unravelled the mechanism behind black pepper’s purported weight management properties after they revealed that piperine from black pepper extract may block fat cell formation.
The supposed fat-fighting potential of black pepper may have been unravelled, after researchers revealed that the ‘pungent’ compound found in the spice could block the formation of new fat cells.
The study – published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry – identifies piperine from black pepper extracts as having potential to fight obesity by blocking the creation of fat cells (known as adipo cytes). “Our findings suggest that piperine, a major component of black pepper, inhibits fat cell differentiation by downregulating the transcriptional activity of PPARγ (and LXRα) and suppressing the expression of PPARγ (and LXRα),” said the researchers, led by Soo-Jong Um from
Sejong University, Korea.
Black pepper benefits: Black pepper and the black pepper plant have been used for centuries in traditional Eastern medicine to treat gastrointestinal distress, pain, inflammation and other disorders.
Um and his colleagues noted that previous studies have indicated piperine reduces fat levels in the bloodstream. In addition to its benefits for weight management, piperine has been suggested to be involved in increasing the absorption of other nutrients in the body. The extract is also suggested to have anti-cancer properties, and could enhance cognitive functions and provide anti-depressant effects.
Despite a long history of traditional uses, and new research suggesting wide ranging benefits, researchers still know little about how piperine works to aid weight management at the cellular level, said the researchers.
Study details: Um and his colleagues investigated the underlying mechanisms of the fat-fighting activity of black pepper extract and its constituent piperine – finding that both black pepper extract and piperine strongly inhibited the fat cell differentiation of 3T3-L1 cell, without affecting cytotoxicity.
“We found that Piper nigrum Linne [back pepper] extract and its constituent piperine reduce lipid storage in 3T3-L1 cells and block t heir differentiation into adipocytes.” They revealed that both black
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pepper extract and piperine reduced the expression levels of key transcription factors associated with adipogenesis – including PPARγ, SREBP-1c, and C/EBPβ. In doing so, the compound may also set off a metabolic chain reaction that helps keep fat in check in other ways, suggested the researchers.
They added that the findings may lead to the wider use of piperine or black-pepper extracts in fighting obesity and related diseases.
Source: Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry Volume 60, Issue 15, Pages 3853 –3860, doi:
10.1021/jf204514a “Piperine, a Component of Black Pepper, Inhibits Adipogenesis by Antagonizing
PPARγ Activity
The Un ion for Ethical BioTrade (UEB) conference ‘Beauty of Sourcing with Respect, will be held in
Paris, France, 26 May 2016. Conference topics will include:
Ethical Sourcing of Biodiversity: o Market trends o Creating brand value o Access and Benefit Sharing (ABS)
The conference should be of interest to:
R&D, Regulatory Affairs, Sustainability, Marketing, Sourcing departments from cosmetics, pharmaceutical and food companies;
NGOs, Government and international agencies interested in private sector involvement in biodiversity and ABS.
Source: UEB
S
Takasago International Corp. has unveiled an S$60 million flavors and fragrances facility in
Singapore, representing the company's largest Asian operation outside Japan, not to mention that company's largest halal development and production site in the company. The fully operational
22,000-square-metre facility, located at Sunview Road, houses flavors and fragrances creation capabilities, food applications, sensory, research and development and manufact-uring. Takasago said the plant is the largest commercially operating plants in the flavors and fragrances industry in
Asia (outside of Japan). The latest investment follows the S$40 million that the company had already invested since starting operations in Singapore in 1975.
In addition, Takasago said the Singapore facility is the largest supplier of flavors in the republic to the halal market, with more than 90% of its output being certified by either Majlis Ugama Islam Singapura
(MUIS) or Majelis Ulama Indonesia (MUI). The company said Takasago International Singapore will become the only global flavors and fragrances player to implement an automated storage and retrieval System in this region. With Takasago International Singapore now fully operational, the company has the capacity to deliver up to 30,000 tons of flavors and fragrances a year. This is more than a three-fold increase as a result in opening this new facility. Its existing facilities at Pandan Loop and Penjuru Road are currently still in operations.
Takasago International Corporation was founded in Japan in 1920. For more than 95 years,
Takasago has developed flavors and fragrances for some of the world’s most successful food, beverage, fine fragrance, household and personal care products. Takasago is a leading global company especially in the Asian region. The global Takasago organization maintains offices, production sites and R & D centers in 28 countries. Through its network of global research, production, creativity and marketing, the company develop products tailored to the needs of individual markets.
Source: Takasago
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Essential Oils & Oleoresins – January 2016
Firmenich announced its environmental goals for 2020, pursuing the company's vision to become a carbon neutral company. The company will invest $15 million in renewable energy in order to double the current level of on-site electricity generated from renewable resources.
By 2020, Firmenich aims to reach:
• 100% of electricity from renewable resources
• Zero waste to landfill for 50% of manufacturing sites
• 20% reduction in absolute carbon dioxide emissions
• 25% decrease of water use in water stressed areas
• 15% reduction in waste generation
• Zero refrigerant R22 used
Firmenich received the DuPont Safety and Sustainability Award in 2015.
Source: Firmenich
Tropical Forestry Services (TFS) expects a 10-fold increase in the size of its next harvest. The company, which has an Indian sandalwood plantation in Kununurra, in the far north of Western
Australia, said it planned to harvest 300 tons of sandalwood heartwood in 2016. TFS managing director Frank Wilson said while 300 tons was still "not a large amount", it would allow the company to supply new markets. "It makes a big difference. Up until now we've only had enough production to supply a few of our customers, the majority in the pharmaceutical industry," he said. "But with the increased harvest we will be able to extend that to a much broader range of our customer base in the
Chinese wood manufacturing industry, the Middle East, India (and) the western European fine fragrance and cosmetics industries, which we already supply quite a lot of sandalwood oil to. "It's great because it gives us that capacity to start feeding some of the markets which we know we are in high demand from."
Source: TFS
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Essential Oils & Oleoresins – January 2016
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The cinnamon produced by Sri Lanka is Cinnamomum verum (syn. Cinnamomum zeylanicum ). A range of other Cinnamomum species, collectively known as Cassia are also used as a source of the spice, and in fact dominate the market in terms of volume. Apart from small production of C. verum in other Indian Ocean islands (principally Madagascar and Seychelles), Sri Lanka is the only source of this product, which is widely referred to as Ceylon cinnamon. Cassia is produced by SE Asian origins
– principally China, Indonesia, and Vietnam.
The key differences between Ceylon cinnamon (hereafter referred to as ‘cinnamon’) and cassia are the low level of coumarin (a naturally occurring compound which can pose toxicity risks if consumed in excessive amounts) in cinnamon; and the fine (thin) bark of cinnamon which allows for the preparation of the addedvalue ‘quills’ (rolls of multiple layers of bark). In general usage of the spice, levels of coumarin are not a problem with cassia or cinnamon, but in some markets and products very high levels of the spice are used (particular biscuits in Germany and Scandinavian countries at Christmas for example) which can lead to concern about the levels of coumarin in the product. See the note at the end of this document for further information on the issue of coumarin content in the spice.
Cinnamon cultivation in Sri Lanka is concentrated in the SW quarter of the country, mainly along the coastal belt from Negombo to Matara, but has spread to inland areas in Ratnapura district. Total cultivated area is estimated in the range 25,000 to 30,000 ha, of which most, around 80% is in
Southern Province. Most of the cinnamon cultivation is under smallholder management, and the sector provides a very important source of employment. It is estimated that there are around 250,000 cinnamon cultivators, 400,000 employees in the sector, and around 60,000 family units depend directly on the sector for their main source of income.
Optimum cultivation conditions are temperature in the range 20 to 30 o
C, rainfall of 1,250 to 2,500 mm/yr, and a freely draining soil. Bark is harvested twice a year, immediately after the end of each rainy season when the bark can be more easily removed, beginning when the tree is 3 years old. The economic lifespan of a cinnamon tree is 30 to 40 years. Yields are up to 450 to 500 kg/ha bark, and
10,000 kg/ha leaves.
The key commercial products from cinnamon are:
Cinnamon quills
Cinnamon chips
Cinnamon featherings
Cinnamon leaf oil
Cinnamon bark oil
Quills are the premium product, and are graded according to the thickness of the bark – fine, Mexican and Hamburg, with further subdivision based on the thickness of the quill. Chips are trimmings of unpeeled cut shoots, shavings of inner and outer bark, and odd pieces of thick bark, and are mainly used for distillation. Featherings are the inner bark of twigs and twisted shoots, and are used for grinding and also distillation of bark oil.
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Cinnamon quills – different grades
Bundles of cinnamon quills
The bark yields an oil with high cinnamic aldehyde content, while the leaf oil is high in eugenol. (There is also an oil from the root, with a high percentage of camphor, but this is not a commercial product.)
Cinnamon bark oil is a very expensive essential oil, with price depending on the material used to distill the oil. Quills produce the best oil, but quillings (broken pieces of quills of all grades) are more economic to distill as these are otherwise used for grinding. The freshness of the feedstock is the key determinant of the quality of the oil produced. Traditionally distillation is by hydro-distillation, but steam distillation is being increasingly used (where steam is generated in a separate steam boiler).
Cinnamon bark oil is a yellowish to brownish liquid, becoming darker with age and with exposure to the air, with the characteristic odour of cinnamon – powerful, warm, spicy, lingering odour, with a sweet
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and spicy taste. The main uses are in food flavour, beverages, pharmaceutical preparations, cosmetics and perfumes.
Distillation takes around 4 to 5 hours, and the yield of oil is in the reange 0.5 to 0.7%. The oil is priced according to its aldehyde content, the higher the cinnamic aldehyde content the better the quality the higher the price, with current prices in the range US$150 to $200/kg. The oil contains a very large number of compounds – the main ones of which are shown in the Table below:
Compound % content in oil
Trans-cinnamic aldehyde
Cinnamic acetate
Eugenol
Eugenyl acetate
Beta-caryophellene
1-8 ceneol
Linalool
Bezyl benzoate
50-70%
2-7%
3-25%
0-0.3%
2-7%
1-3%
2-7%
0.5-3%
Safarol 0-0.3%
There are a range of standards for Cinnamon Bark Oil. Typically it is defined as the product as obtained by steam distillation from the inner dried bark of the clipped cinnamon shrub, with oil characteristics of:
Specific gravity at 25
Optical rotation at 20 o
/25 o
C: 1.010 to 1.030 o
C: 0 o
to -2 o
Refractive index at 20 o
C 1.573 to 1.591
Aldehyde content:
Solubility in alcohol (70% at 25 o
55 to 78% w/w, calculated as cinnamic aldehyde
C): Soluble in 3 and more volumes
Production and export of cinnamon bark oil from Sri Lanka has been rising over the past 5 years, from previous levels of around 7 tons/yr to current levels of around 15 tons/yr. The principal market for this product is France.
Cinnamon leaf oil
Cinnamon leaves are obtained as a by-product of the cinnamon industry. When the shoots are harvested for bark, the leaves and twigs are trimmed in the field. The leaves are left in the field for 3 to
4 days before distillation. Leaves are gathered up in ‘bundles’ – each bundle is around 40 kgs in weight. Large stills are used, with around 7-8 bundles (around 300 to 350 kgs) being used for each distillation. Distillation is carried out in traditional wooden still vessels, with the steam generated in a separate boiler. Distillation takes around 6 to 7 hours, and the yield of oil is around 1%.
Market Insider
Essential Oils & Oleoresins – January 2016
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Cinnamon leaves drying in field
Cinnamon leaf bundles, awaiting distillation
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Traditional wooden still bodies for distillation of leaf oil
Distillation of cinnamon leaf oil
Cinnamon leaf oil is graded according to eugenol content. Sri Lankan cinnamon leaf oil specifies a eugenol content of 75-80% with a maximum of 5% cinnamic aldehyde. The major components of leaf oil are shown in the Table below:
Principal components of Cinnamon leaf oil
Compound
Trans-cinnamic aldehyde
Cinnamic acetate
Eugenol
% content in oil
1-5%
0.2-2%
70-80%
Eugenyl acetate
Beta-caryophellene
1-8 ceneol
Linalool
Bezyl benzoate
Safarol
1.5-4%
2-5%
1-3%
2-7%
0.5-3%
0-0.3%
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The International Standard for cinnamon leaf oil is ISO 3524.
A typical standard for cinnamon leaf oil is:
Specific gravity at 25
Optical rotation at 20 o
/25
Refractive index at 20 o o
C: 1.030 to 1.050 o
C: +1 o
to -2 o
C 1.529 to 1.537
Eugenol content:
Solubility in alcohol (70% at 25 o
70 to 85% w/w, calculated as cinnamic aldehyde
C): Soluble in 1.5 and more volumes
Within Sri Lanka, eugenol content varies by production area – it is reported that oils from the
Meetiyagoda area, for example, would almost always have a eugenol content of over 80%, while oils from the Matara area would rarely reach these levels.
Prices for cinnamon leaf oil are in the range US$13 to US$17/kg. Production and export levels are generally in the range 250 to 300 tons/yr. The US is the major market, taking over 50% of all production, followed by UK and Germany.
Organic and Fair Trade production
Currently there are estimated to be around 1,200 ha of certified organic cinnamon production in Sri
Lanka – around 5% of the total area planted to cinnamon. In 2014, 1.5 tons of organic cinnamon bark oil was exported, and 2 tons of organic leaf oil. It is expected that these quantities will increase further with time.
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Essential Oils & Oleoresins – January 2016
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Background
Permitted levels of coumarin in foods are controlled by the EU Flavourings Directive 88/388/EEC and subsequent modifications. The maximum allowable level of coumarin in foods (as a naturally occurring ingredient in the food) is set at 2 mg/kg of the foodstuff (ie 2 ppm)
1
. As a rough guide, the limits allow around 0.5 g cassia/kg of foodstuff.
Cassia, naturally, has high and variable coumarin levels; cinnamon has very low to zero levels of coumarin. High application levels of cassia with high coumarin content can lead to the regulatory limits being grossly exceeded – there are reports of product tests giving results in the range 22 to 77 mg/kg, far above the regulatory limit of 2 mg/kg. The issue for cassia is both the high levels and the variability.
Tests of a range of samples showed coumarin content in the range 2,100 to 4,400 mg/kg of cassia (ie
2.1 to 4.4 gms/kg, 0.2 to 0.4%). Where manufacturers are using high levels of cassia in a product, as in the German cinnamon biscuits, each batch of cassia has to be tested for coumarin content and the amout added to the product adjusted to ensure that coumarin content in the final product will be within regulatory limits. Clearly this is not a viable strategy for efficient industrial production, and the formulation must be changed in some way.
Coumarin levels in cinnamon, even when present, are not an issue. Levels of coumarin found in cinnamon are typically less than 15 mg/kg of the spice (compared with over 2,000 mg/kg for cassia).
It is important to note that retail sales of the spice are exempt from the regulations, and foods cooked and consumed on the same premises are also expected to remain exempt from the regulations.
Coumarin levels are therefore not an issue for whole and ground spice for retail sale, or for restaurants etc in the food service industry. In these 2 critical market areas for cinnamon, cassia is not disadvantaged by the regulatory environment.
Current Situation
There is a move to change the basis of the permitted level of coumarin to a Tolerable Daily Intake
(TDI), based on a persons consumption and body weight, rather than a simple measurement of content in a food with no reference to how much is eaten and the consumer. The proposed TDI of coumarin is 0.1 mg/kg body wt. A TDI is a more logical measurement, but increases the problems for the industry. For a 50 kg person, the TDI would be 0.5 mg/kg coumarin, equivalent to around 1 g cassia/person/day. However, limits for children would be much lower – and this can be an important factor, as many of the issues surround consumption of sweet biscuits – much liked by children and who may eat more than adults.
Although the basis of the TDI is dietary intake, it has to account for all sources of coumarin, not just from food, and it is becoming clear that cosmetics are an important source of coumarin
2
, and herbal/medicinal/food supplements based on cassia may also deliver very high doses of coumarin.
For cosmetics, there are no limits on the addition of coumarin, although as the substance is an allergen its content must be declared if above a certain level. It is clear that normal use of creams, perfumes, skin gels etc can result in coumarin intake levels up to half the recommended TDI. Coumarin is easily absorbed through the skin, and while there is no research yet to show that coumarin absorbed through this route has hepatotoxic effect, it must be assumed that it does until shown otherwise.
Use of cassia in herbal/food supplements can also result in the ingestion of very high levels of cassia accounting for a substantial proportion – or exceeding – the recommended TDI. Both the authoritative
German Commission E and the WHO Monographs on cinnamon and cassia recommend a daily dose in the range 2 to 4 gms – which would give a very high dose of coumarin if cassia is used.
1 It is not allowed to add coumarin to foods. Exceptions to the general limit are: 10 mg/kg in certain types of caramel confectionary; 50 mg/kg in chewing gum; 10 mg/kg in alcoholic beverages,
2 Added as a pure compound, as a fragrance ingredient.
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Future Prospects
Regulatory limits for coumarin will certainly not be relaxed and are likely to tighten in the future as the scope and scale of other sources of coumarin outside food usage becomes clear. Given the multinational trade of the major spice companies, the level of attention given to coumarin in Germany is likely to transfer to the other countries in Europe. It is possible that the regulatory regime will move to one based on a TDI for coumarin of 0.1 mg/kg body wt but this would make compliance with the regulatory environment more difficult for manufacturers. As a result of the regulatory environment, a small part of demand will – and clearly already is – transfer from cassia to cinnamon, but the main impact is likely to be substantially increased use of manufactured (natural) flavourings in the food manufacturing industry, where the coumarin content is kept to a low level, with the use of ground cassia restricted to low levels. The issue of coumarin content is an issue for the manufacturing/ processing industry, and they have the option to move a substantial proportion of demand to prepared flavourings, away from direct use of the natural spice.
The herbal/food supplements sector must offer considerable potential for the replacement of cassiabased product with cinnamon-based product, but research will be needed to show that cinnamon can deliver the same benefits as are claimed for cassia.
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PLEASE REMEMBER THAT THESE ARE ONLY PRICE INDICATIONS.
Price indications collected from the markets are given for a range of essential oils, below. The oils are grouped for convenience only into Spice Oils, Seed Oils, Citrus Oils, Herb Oils and Perfumery Oils.
Prices are wholesale for quantities of 25kg or more unless otherwise stated.
Product
Clove bud
Clove stem
Clove leaf
Cinnamon bark
Cinnamon leaf
Cassia bark
Black pepper
Nutmeg
Ginger
Pimento leaf
Pimento berry
Cardamom
Origin/Grade
Indonesian
Indian
Madagascan
Indonesian
India
Madagascar
Indonesian min. 73%
Indonesian min. 80%
Indonesian min. 82%
Madagascan
Indonesian
Indonesia
Sri Lankan 60/65%
Sri Lankan
India
China
Sri Lankan
Indian
Indonesian (myristicin 7%)
Indonesian(myristicin 2%)
Indonesian (safrole free)
Chinese
Indonesia
Indian
Indonesia (red)
Jamaican
Jamaican
Jamaican
Jamaican
Guatemala
Prices per KG (US$)
$21/kg 200kg lots
$84/kg 1 kg lots
$75/kg 1 kg lots
$15/kg container
$50/kg
$36/kg 200 kg lots
$11.00/kg, container
$12.50/kg
$13/kg
$17/kg
$46/kg
$18/kg container n/a
$70/kg 1 kg lots
$20/kg
$35/kg; $70 1 kg lots
$218/kg 1 kg lots
$125/kg; $195 1 kg lots
$30/kg
$27/kg
$62/kg
$105/kg
$95/kg
$80/kg
$98/kg
$140/kg
$90 container
€210/kg
$154 1 tonne lots
$185/kg container
$210/kg spot
Product
Aniseed
Origin/Grade
China
Star Anise
Coriander seed
Coriander herb
Cumin seed
India
India
Russian
Russian
Egypt
Prices per KG (US$)
$13-16 CIF NW Europe;
$75/kg 1 kg lots
$25/kg
$120/kg
$200/kg
$100/kg drum
$285/kg 1 kg lots
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Product
Orange (sweet)
Orange (bitter)
Bergamot oil
Lemon
Lime (distilled)
Lime (cold pressed)
Mandarin (red)
Grapefruit (pink)
Grapefruit (white)
Product
Basil
Lavender
Lavendin
Spike Lavender
Mints
Menthol
Peppermint menthofuran 3%
Peppermint
Peppermint dementholised
Menthone 80/20
Menthone 90/10
Spearmint 60% carvone
Chamomile (German)
Chamomile (Roman)
Sage
Rosemary
Marjoram
Thyme
Origin/Grade
Brazilian
Italy (b/orange c/pressed)
Brazil (pera)
Italian (c/pressed)
Ivory Coast/Italy
Italian
Italian (c/pressed)
Argentina
Brazil
Italian
Mexico/Peru
Italy
Argentina
France
Prices per KG (US$)
$16/kg; $30/kg 1 kg lots
$33/kg
$7/kg container
$45/kg
$80/kg; $135/kg 1 kg lots
$58/kg 1 kg lots
$35
$55-$58/kg container
$55/kg n/a
$46/kg container;
$62/kg
$25/kg
$80/kg
$42/kg; $50/kg 1 kg lots
$40/kg
Origin/Grade
Comores
Egypt
Bulgaria
French
English
Russia
French Grosso
Spain
Indian piperita
India, mentha arvensis crude, Lmenthol 72%
Indian, bold crystals
Indian, medium crystals
China
China
China
Indian
Indian
Indian
China
German blue
Morocco (wild)
Egypt (blue)
UK
Croatia
Portugal/Spain/Tunisia
Spain
France
Spain (wild)
Spain
Prices per KG (US$)
$125/kg
$82/kg; $150/kg 1 kg lots
$96/kg
$250/kg
$200/kg
$95/kg drum
$30/kg
$110/kg
$27/kg
$13/kg
$19/kg
$15/kg
$18/kg
$23.50/kg
$15/kg container
$13/kg
$16/kg
$19/kg
$23/kg
$670/kg
$450/kg
$1,000/kg
$1000/kg
$130/kg
$55
$68/kg drum
$78
$210/kg 1 kg lots
$67/kg; $85 1 kg lots
18
Market Insider
Essential Oils & Oleoresins – January 2016
Product
Eucalyptus globulus & other high cineole types
Eucalyptus citriodora
Litsea cubeba
Ylang ylang
Ylang (cananga)
Patchouli - Indonesia
Rose
Geranium
Rose Geranium
Niaouli (Cineole 1,8) (Malaleuca quinquenervia type I)
Niaouli Viridiflora (Malaleuca viridiflora type II)
Petitgrain
Sandalwood
Cedarwood
Frankincense
Citronella
Lemongrass
Palmarosa
Vetiver
Tea Tree
Origin/Grade
China
Australian
China
Madagascar
China
Madagascar
Spain
China
Comores: Extra S
Comores : Première
Comores : Deuxième
Comores : Troisième
Comores: Complet
Madagascar (grade II)
Indonesia
Sulawesi min 26% pa
Sulawesi min 30% pa
Sulawesi min 30% pa, light
Sumatra min 30% pa
Sumatra min 32% pa
Sumatra min 34% pa
Sumatra min 30% pa, light
Bulgaria
Egypt
Egypt
China
Madagascar
Madagascar/France
Madagascar
Madagascar
Prices per KG (US$)
$13/kg container; $35/kg 1 kg lots
$44/kg
$38/kg 1kg lots
$31/kg
$49/kg 1 kg lots
$25/kg
$22/kg
$21/kg container n/a
$225/kg
$180/kg
$95/kg
$150/kg 1 kg lots
$80/kg
$61/kg 1 ton lots
$48/kg
$51/kg
$52/kg
$62/kg
$67/kg
$72/kg
$64/kg
$5,750/kg
$125/kg
$120/kg
$155/kg
$310/kg
$225/kg
$16/kg; $60/kg 1 kg lots
$20/kg
Paraguay
India
East Indies
Australian
USA
China
Somalia/France
Chinese
Sri Lanka
Indonesia
Indian
Indian
Madagascar (C. giganteus)
Indian
Indonesian
Indonesian
Indonesian, molecular dist.
Australia
Australia, lemon scented
$58/kg drum; $98/kg 1 kg lots
$2,900/kg
$2,500/kg
$2,025/kg
$52/kg
$13/kg container; $50/kg 1 kg lots
$270/kg
$18/kg container; $23/kg; $53 1 kg lots
$40/kg container
$16/kg
$18/kg
$16/kg container; $37/kg 1 kg lots
$55/kg
$38/kg; $130/kg 1 kg lots
$180/kg; $380/kg 1 kg lots
$190 rectified
$225/kg
$44/kg; $90/kg 1 kg lots
$140/kg
19
Market Insider
Essential Oils & Oleoresins – January 2016
Product
Guaiacwood
Fennel, bitter
Juniperberry
Myrrh
Origin/Grade
Paraguay
Spain
India
India (extract)
India (distilled)
Prices per KG (US$)
$25/kg drum
$97/kg
$120/kg; $260/kg 1 kg lots
$133/kg
$270/kg; $395/kg 1 kg lots
Market Insider
Essential Oils & Oleoresins – January 2016
20
PLEASE REMEMBER THAT THESE ARE ONLY PRICE INDICATIONS.
Price indications collected from the markets are given for a range of essential oils, below. The oils are grouped for convenience only into Spice Oils, Seed Oils, Citrus Oils, Herb Oils and Perfumery Oils.
Prices are wholesale for quantities of 25kg or more unless otherwise stated.
Product
Clove bud
Clove leaf
Cinnamon bark
Cinnamon leaf
Nutmeg
Ginger
Origin/Grade
Indian
Indian
Sri Lankan
Sri Lankan
Indonesian
India
Prices per KG (US$)
$150/kg
$75/kg
$420/kg
$110/kg
$172/kg
$270/kg
$170/kg drum
Product
Star Anise
Cumin seed
Product
Orange (sweet)
Orange (bitter)
Bergamot
Lemon
Mandarin (red)
Mandarin (green)
Clementine
Petitgrain (C. aurantium)
Origin/Grade
China
Egypt
Origin/Grade
Italian (c/pressed)
Italian (c/pressed)
Italy (c/pressed)
Italian (c/pressed)
Italian (c/pressed)
Argentina
Italy
Italy
Italy
Paraguay
Prices per KG
$180/kg
$90/kg
Prices per KG
$36/kg
$135/kg
$195/kg
$60/kg
$71/kg
$75
$225/kg
$187/kg
$120/kg
$110/kg
21
Market Insider
Essential Oils & Oleoresins – January 2016
Product
Basil
Lavender
Lavendin
Mint, peppermint
Mint, Cornmint
Mint, spearmint, M. spicata
Chamomile (German)
Chamomile (Roman)
Sage
Rosemary
Marjoram
Thyme
Fennel
Origin/Grade
Egypt
India
France
French Grosso
USA
India
India, mentha arvensis
USA
Nepal
India
Hungary
Croatia
Spain
Tunisia
Spain
Hungary
India
India
Prices per KG
$187/kg n/a
$210/kg
$55/kg
$90/kg
$65/kg drum
$52/kg
$112/kg
$780/kg
$1,250/kg
$1,500/kg
$240/kg
$42/kg
$25/kg
$330/kg
$300/kg
$65/kg
130/kg
Product
Eucalyptus radiata & other high cineole types
E. globulus
E. polybractea
E. smithii
Eucalyptus citriodora
Litsea cubeba
Ylang ylang
Patchouli
Geranium
Sandalwood
Cedarwood
Naouli
Ravinsara
Frankincense
Pine (P. silvestris)
Citronella
Lemongrass
Palmarosa
Vetiver
Tea Tree
Origin/Grade
China
India
India
Australian
South Africa
Brazil
India
Spain
Comores: I
Comores : II
Comores : III
Comores: Complet
Indonesia
Egypt
Sri Lanka
USA
Madagascar
Somalia/France
India (B. serrata)
Hungary
Sri Lanka
India
Nepal
India
Indonesian
Indian
Australia
Market Insider
Essential Oils & Oleoresins – January 2016
Prices per KG
$64/kg
$45/kg (60%)
$50/kg (80%)
$135/kg
$75/kg
$52/kg
46/kg
$35/kg
$225/kg
$180/kg
$210/kg
$330/kg
$175/kg;
$375/kg 1 kg lots
$1,950/kg 1 kg lots
$63/kg
$97/kg
$275/kg 10 kg lots
$525/kg 1 kg lots
$78/kg drum
$190/kg
$100/kg
$63/kg
$75/kg
$80/kg
$70/kg
$450/kg 1 kg lots
$350/kg
$90/kg;
22
Product
Fennel, sweet
Juniperberry
Myrrh
Origin/Grade
Australia, lemon scented
Bulgaria
India
Africa
Prices per KG
$225/kg
$150/kg
$225/kg
$1,800/kg
Market Insider
Essential Oils & Oleoresins – January 2016
23
The distillation and extraction industry in Africa is relatively small and localised outside of the North
African centers of Egypt and Morocco, and Southern Africa (South Africa, Swaziland). New entrants to the industry can find it hard to identify suppliers of equipment (stills, condensers, extractor vessels etc) in stainless steel, steam boilers, and other necessary materials (drums, jugs, filter papers etc).
The development of the industry in Africa would benefit greatly if there was greater sharing of information on the location of suppliers. New entrants would find it easier to identify necessary suppliers, and the concentration of orders on particular suppliers would encourage the development of skills and expertise – this is particularly necessary in the areas of fabrication of stainless steel vessels and condensers.
Some contacts of companies involved in the manufacture of distillation/extraction equipment or the capability to do so (primarily the capability to work with stainless steel) or supply of materials based in
East Africa are given below.
The Newsletter would welcome information from Readers on other suppliers of relevant equipment and materials from all regions of Africa, so that the listing can be expanded.
Please send any information to marketinsider@intracen.org
The contacts are provided as a service only. NO RECOMMENDATION IS IMPLIED.
1. MANUFACTURE OF STAINLESS STEEL DISTILLATION EQUIPMENT:
KENYA:
ASL – Heavy Fabrication Division
Ramco Industrial Park
Mombassa Road
PO Box 18639-00500
Nairobi. Kenya
Tel: +254 20 821567/820296/820394
Fax: +254 20 820169/651893 bm@heavyfab.co.ke
Attn: Mr Ve Balamurali, General Manager
Warren Enterprises Ltd
PO Box 8251
Nairobi. Kenya
Tel: +254 20 8561 932/3/4
Fax: +254 20 8561 013
Attn: Mr S Ramaswamy, Managing Director
Morris Steel & Company
Mogadishu Road
PO Box 18310
Nairobi. Kenya
Tel: +254 20 533 627
Attn: General Manager
24
Market Insider
Essential Oils & Oleoresins – January 2016
UGANDA:
Specialised Welding Services (previously Kasise Kleinsmedie Uganda Ltd)
Jinja Road, Plot 96
PO Box 40115
Nakawa Vocational Training Center
Kampala
Uganda
Tel: +256 (776) 405060/405070/405080
+256 (772) 227 003 (Samantha Moray) sam.moray@sws.co.ug
Attn: Samantha Moray, General Manager www.sws.co.ug
MADAGASCAR:
Societe Aris Trading
Lot VB 81X Ambatoroka
101-Antananarivo. Madagascar
Tel: +261 20 24 264 96
Fax: +261 20 22 290 24 aristrading@freenet.mg
Attn: Mr James Davidson
ATICOM
Lot IT 91A Itaosy
102 Antananarivo – Atsimondrano. Madagascar
Tel: +261 32 07 744 34 morasatajosoa@yahoo.fr
Attn: Josoa Andriamorasata
SOUTH AFRICA:
EDESA
PO Box 123
Riebeek Kasteel 7306
Western Cape. South Africa
Tel: +27 (82) 334 3324 info@edesa.co.za
Attn: Werner Bester
Manufacture of distillation equipment and sales of used equipment.
BENCO PLANT & ENGINEERING (PTY) Ltd
159 Van Eeden Crescent, Rosslyn, Karin Park
P O Box 59. Pretoria, Gauteng. South Africa
Tel: +27 (12) 541-0398
Fax: +27 (12) 541-0399
Attn: Sloam Durbach
Manufacturer of distillation equipment and steam boilers
POWERSAVE
PO Box 699
Hilton 3245. South Africa
Tel (cell): +27 82 493 8670
Fax: +27 33 34 33 755
Attn: Greg Rowe gregrowe@telcomsa.net
Manufacture of steam distillation plants
Henry S Komar & Associates CC
Market Insider
Essential Oils & Oleoresins – January 2016
25
2 Hebel Road, Roodepoort, Gauteng, South Africa
Postal address: PO Box 994, Honeydew 2040, South Africa
Tel: +27 11 760 2718
Fax: +27 11 760 1079
Attn: Stan Kumar, CEO info@komar.co.za
; sales@komar.co.za
www.komar.co.za
Manufacture of stainless steel distillation and processing equipment. Also sales of secondhand equipment.
The Process Team CC
37 Nelson Road, Amanzimtoti
Kwa-Zulu Natal 4126. South Africa
Attn: Peter Myburg
Design and manufacture of stainless steel distillation equipment.
2. SUPPLIERS OF STEAM BOILERS
MADAGASCAR
ARTICOM
Lot IT 91A Itaosy
102 Antananarivo – Atsimondrano. Madagascar
Tel: +261 32 07 744 34 morasatajosoa@yahoo.fr
Attn: Josoa Andriamorasata
ARTICOM make a simple, low pressure, wood fired steam boiler.
KENYA:
Industrial Boiler Products Co. Ltd.
Kampala Road, Industrial Area
Nairobi, Kenya.
+254 733 700175 mail@industrialboilerproducts.co.ke
peter.fernandes@industrialboilerproducts.co.ke
Peter Fernandes www.ibp.co.ke
Indian manufactured steam boilers; biomass fired.
Boiler Consortium Africa (BCA) Ltd
PO Box 60780. Nairobi. Kenya
Tel: +254 20 557837/ 536793/ 4349310
Tel: +254 722 750131/ 703511/
Fax: +254 20 735 331177
Barry Corlines info@boilersafrica.com
www.boilersafrica.com
BCA design, manufacture and commission boilers, included wood fired steam boilers, and are agents for Riello in East Africa.
26
Market Insider
Essential Oils & Oleoresins – January 2016
SOUTH AFRICA:
Combustion Technology South Africa
PO Box 30047. Tokai, 7966 Cape Town, South Africa
Tel: +27 21 715 3171
Fax: +27 21 715 6297 www.combustiontechnology.co.za
Combustion Technology are the exclusive Southern African distributors of Riello burners and Garioni
Naval Boilers.
BENCO PLANT & ENGINEERING (PTY) Ltd
159 Van Eeden Crescent, Rosslyn, Karin Park
P O Box 59. Pretoria, Gauteng. South Africa
Tel: +27 (12) 541-0398
Fax: +27 (12) 541-0399
Attn: Sloam Durbach
Manufacturer of distillation equipment and steam boilers
CAPE BOILER
16 Natal Street, Parden Island, Cape Town, South Africa
Tel: +27 21 511 6652
Fax: +27 511 4415
Attn: Mr Nic Kellerman
INDIA:
Firetech Boilers Pvt Ltd
FIRETECH HOUSE, No.211, 2nd Cross, 38th Main,
B.T.M Layout, 2nd Stage, Bangalore 560 068. India
Tel: +91-80-6683686; Fax: +91-80-6683921
Email: firetech@vsnl.net
Manufacture of wood fired steam boilers. Indian manufacturer, but has supplied boilers to Africa.
AUSTRIA:
Binder GMBH
Mitterdorferstr. 5
8572 Barnbach
Austria
Email: office@binder-gmbh.at
Tel: +43 3142 22544-0
Fax: +43 3142 22544-16 www.binder-gmbh.at
Binder Agents in UK:
Wood Energy Ltd, Severn House, 1-4 Fountain Court, Bradley Stoke, Bristol. BS32 4LA www.woodenergyltd.co.uk
Kohlbach Group
Grazer StraBe 23
A-9400 Wolfsberg
Austria
Email: office@kohlbach.at
Tel: +43 4352 2157-0
Fax: +43 4352 2157-290 www.kohlbach.at
27
Market Insider
Essential Oils & Oleoresins – January 2016
USA:
Hurst Boiler & Welding Company, Inc.
100 Boilermaker Lane
Coolidge, GA 31738-0530
USA
3.
Phone: +1 229-346-3545
Fax: +1 229-346-3874
Email: info@hurstboiler.com www.hurstboiler.com
SUPPLIERS OF MATERIALS AND EQUIPMENT
(a) Forklift trucks/pallet trucks
Forktruck Solutions
16 Kiewiet Close, Okavango Park, Brackenfel 7560, Cape Town. South Africa
Postal address: PO Box 3221, Durbanville 7551. South Africa
Tel: +27 21 982 1142 and +27 21 981 2649;
Cell: +27 83 2848 557
Fax: +27 21 982 1141
Attn: Dirk van der Westhuizen dirk@forktrucksolutions.co.za
www.forktrucksolutions.co.za
Sales and rental of new and used forklift trucks. Also pallet jacks/stackers and range of other warehouse equipment.
(b) Hoists and lifting equipment
Blue Cranes,
Crane House, 10 Mansell Road, Killarney Gardens, Minerton, Cape Town, South Africa
Postal address: PO Box 702, Melkbosstrand 7437. South Africa
Tel: +27 21 556 0498/9
Fax: +27 21 556 0486
Attn: Mr Kobus Steyn joseph@bluecranes.co.za
www.bluecranes.co.za
Manufactures full range of hoists, beam girder cranes and lifting equipment. Sole supplier of Liftket electric chain hoists and wire rope hoist units. Repairs and spare parts supply service. Supply of associated slings, chains, blocks etc.
(c) Essential oil drums:
Greif supply a range of steel and coated drums, and are present in 45 countries around the world.
Greif Kenya Ltd
Box9036 - Unga Street
Shimanzi – Mombasa. Kenya
Tel: +254 41 2495591
Fax: +254 41 2494038 pascal.wanyonyi@greif.co.ke
Attn: Pascal Wanyonyi
28
Market Insider
Essential Oils & Oleoresins – January 2016
Greif Nigeria Ltd
Apapa, Nigeria
Phone +234 (01) 587 0866
Fax +234 (01) 587 3084 vanleer@linkserve.com.ng
Attn: Olukunle Obadina,
Greif South Africa Ltd
Vanderbijlpark, South Africa
Phone +27 (0) 16 930 1100
Fax +27 (0) 16 930 1106 carl.williams@grief.com
Attn: Carl Williams
Website: www.greif.co.za
Greif Mozambique
Maputo. Mozambique
Phone +258 21 720153
Fax +258 21 720724 vanleer@vironn.com
Greif Egypt
Cairo, Egypt
Phone +20 2588 1110 Fax +20 2593 3889
E-mail: koracons@link.com.eg
Attn: Ayman Korra
Greif Algeria
Arzew, Algeria
Phone + 213 41473723 / + 213 41473724Fax + 213 41473730
E-mail: Mohamed.Gherbi@Greif.com
Attn: Mohamed Gherbi
China:
Guangzhou New Jinrong Coopery Co. Ltd.
No.7 Huancui xi road
Cuishanhu new district
Kaiping
Guangdong. China
Ms. Lucinda Lux
Tel : +86 159 14338971,+86 18620468156, 0750-2889978
Fax: +86 7502889978
Email: newjinrong@163.com
; paul_chew@163.com
SKYPE: xpyllj74
India:
Al-Can Exports Pvt Ltd
Sheetal Industrial Estate, Kashimira Road,
Bhayander East District,
Thane 401 105
India.
Tel: +91 22 2819 3122
Fax: +91 22 2814 2477
Email: info@alcanexports.com
Large range of aluminium flasks and bottles.
Market Insider
Essential Oils & Oleoresins – January 2016
29
France:
Tournaire SA
70, Route de la Paoute
Le Plan.
BP 71004
06131 Grasse Cedex
France
Tel: +33 493 09 34 34
Fax: +33 493 09 34 00
Email: tournaire@tournaire.fr
Tournaire do a very wide range of aluminium bottles.
(d) Secondhand/used equipment
Secondhand equipment, particularly stills and condensers, can represent very good value. Details are given for 2 companies which have experience of shipping worldwide, and sometimes have distillation equipment in stock.
Perry Process Equipment Ltd
Station Road
Aycliffe Business Park
Newton Aycliffe
County Durham. DL5 6EQ. UK
Phone: +44 1325 315111
Fax: +44 1325 301496 info@perryprocess.co.uk
Website: www.perryprocess.co.uk
Perry Process Equipment is the European headquarters of the Perry Group of companies, which has operations around the world and is one of the worlds largest dealers in secondhand process equipment.
Centriplant Ltd
Littlemead Industrial Estate
Alfold Road
Cranleigh
Surrey. GU6 8ND
UK
Phone: +44 (01483) 271507
Fax: +44 (01483) 278183
Contact: Mark Williams markw@centriplant.co.uk
Website: www.centriplant.co.uk
Centriplant has distillation plants on an occasional basis, but always have a range of stainless steel tanks, and bottling/packing lines that could also be of interest to producers.
Market Insider
Essential Oils & Oleoresins – January 2016
30
7 th
Annual Bio-Based & Sustainable Products Summit
13-14 January 2016. San Diego, USA www.infocastinc.com/events/biobased-chemicals
Cosme Tokyo 2016
20-22 January 2016. Tokyo, Japan www.cosmetokyo.jp/en/ex
Cosme Tech 2016
20-22 January 2016. Tokyo, Japan www.cosme-i.jp/en
International Spice Conference
21-24 January 2016. Goa, India www.internationalspiceconference.com
American Spice Trade Association Annual Meeting
10-13 April 2016. Scottsdale, AZ, USA www.astaspice.org
Beauty Eurasia 2016
21-23 April 2016. Istanbul, Turkey www.beauty-events.com/Beauty-Eurasia
Cosmobeaute Vietnam
21-23 April 2016. Saigon, Vietnam www.beauty-events.com/Cosmobeaute-Vietnam
World Perfumery Congress 2016
13-15 June 2016. Florida, USA http://wpc.perfumerflavorist.com
Cosmobeaute Asia
18-21 July 2016. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia www.beauty-events.com/Cosmobeaute-Asia
BiobasedWorld Tradeshow
15-16 February 2017. Cologne, Germany www.boiobasedworld.de/en/home.html
Market Insider
Essential Oils & Oleoresins – January 2016
31