Entry Date:
August 27, 2015

Avocado Oil Extraction in Tanzania

Principal Investigator David Wallace


This team aims to design a low-cost centrifuge for avocado oil extraction in rural Tanzanian communities with excess avocadoes.

In Leguruki, a rural Tanzanian village, about 50% of the avocado crop goes to waste. Harvesting and selling avocados produces such a low return due to the commonality and short shelf life of avocados that most people allow their avocados to just fall to the ground and be eaten by livestock or rot. Community members self-identified avocado excess as a potential area for an innovative, income-generating solution. Attempts at avocado oil extraction via drying and pressing have been made in Leguruki. Our team traveled to Tanzania over IAP 2015 to meet with community partners and co-create solar dryers. We know that drying and pressing is an effective method of oil production, but we are now also aware that heat from the drying process degrades the resulting oil. The existing avocado oil market calls for cold-pressed oil, meaning all extraction processes must occur under 50°C. We want to create a low-power, low-cost decanter centrifuge to extract avocado oil without degrading oil quality in the process. This is the most promising method for oil extraction due to the independence from weather conditions and the ability to produce a consistent product. This project only succeeds in its income-generation goal if the end product is commercially viable, so the development of extraction processes that lead to high-quality oil is vital.