Banana paper products crowdfunding
Most business ideas or companies are profit oriented and do not not
focus on the human centered design approach of business. with our
current issues in most of our societies like climate change, low
incomes, gender disparities and poverty. Our Eco banana innovation will
provide solutions to this issues. our innovation demands more banana
stalks saving our forest, banana paper bags are biodegradable saving us
trouble of using and disposing polythene bags, sanitary towels made
from banana paper are affordable and school girls will be trained on
how to make them hence they will no longer miss school monthly and avoid
crude ways to handle this situation like using the soil,chicken
feathers, leaves and torn clothes and all the stress during this natural
period. our production units will be set in villages hence people will
get jobs to extract fibres and woman will make fibre fabrics thus
getting incomes. Help us to help others and together we will make a
difference .
To donate on Safaricom:
Go to MPESA
Select Lipa na M-PESA
Enter Paybill 891300 Account BANANA
To donate on Airtel:
Go to Airtel Money
Select Make Payments, Pay Bill, Other
Business Name MCHANGA, Reference BANANA
To donate on Equitel:
Go to My Money, Select Send/Pay,
Select Account, Enter business number 891300 Enter account number BANANA
for visa,paypal and others click https://secure.changa.co.ke/myweb/sha...
To donate on Safaricom:
Go to MPESA
Select Lipa na M-PESA
Enter Paybill 891300 Account BANANA
To donate on Airtel:
Go to Airtel Money
Select Make Payments, Pay Bill, Other
Business Name MCHANGA, Reference BANANA
To donate on Equitel:
Go to My Money, Select Send/Pay,
Select Account, Enter business number 891300 Enter account number BANANA
for visa,paypal and others click https://secure.changa.co.ke/myweb/sha...
Rwanda banana fiber project
Banana Fiber Unit
Banana
fiber rope unit and its activities. Using banana fiber rope some
handicrafts are made providing employment to the rural population and
also using the fiber to get economic returns.
Various products from banana fiber other than bags and handicrafts
Tamil Nadu village weaves Banana sari
In times when the craze for western outfits is slowly strangling the
sari handloom industry, the handloom weavers of Anakaputhur in the
Indian state of Tamil Nadu have succeeded in reviving the tradition of
Banana sari. This has been particularly beneficial for Anakaputhurs once
booming jute based handlooms of which 7000 have already shut down due
to lack of demand. Through their skill and creativity the weavers
invented a sari spun from a mix of banana and cotton or silk fibres. It
sells 150 such sarees every month for Rs. 700-2500 every month. The
creation has not only helped revitalize a tradition that dates back to
the Ramayana but it is also eco friendly being spun form purely organic
fibre. The weaver association now plans to expand to cope with the
increasing demand and venture abroad too.
Banana Fibre Cloth Weaving Process Handloom
Banana Fibre Cloth Weaving Process Handloom
Sri Achu Fibres is the first & finest banana fibre Pillows and Beds manufactures in India which is 100% nature product for healthy living. We are having our own "Eco-Green Banana fiber extraction Unit" with 2 fiber extraction machines and 7 workers at Erode. Our skilled and dedicated labours are giving maximum production output with very good quality to satisfy the customers. We also deliver pillows and beds in attractive covers and customized sizes on demand.
Start a Business in Banana Fibre Extraction & Weaving
Start a Businesss in Banana Fibre Extraction & Weaving
High quality banana fibre is used for making good quality paper and for blending in textile industry. You can start a business of extracting and weaving banana fibre. This business requires skills and good networking.
INTRODUCTION
Banana
fibre is eco friendly like jute fibre. The technology of banana fibre
extraction has been developed in South India where in a good number of
banana fibre extraction units have been running very successfully. Some
firms are exporting the banana fibre products.
Banana growing states of N.E.Region has adopted the technology from South and started production of banana fibre and fabric.
MARKET POTENTIAL
The
banana fibre is being used for weaving attractive pieces of clothes,
rugs, sarees etc. Besides, it is also being used to produce a variety of
items such as hats, photo frames, trinket boxes, gift bags, picture
frames, hand bags, belts, baskets and sandals etc.
Dresses woven out of natural fibres are in great demand inside and outside India.
PLANT CAPACITY
| ||||
Capacity utilization
|
: 70%
| |||
Average daily production envisaged
|
: 10 Kg cloth.
| |||
Working days/year
|
: 25 days in a month and 300 days in a year.
| |||
Annual production
|
:
| |||
-
|
Door Mat
|
: 1000
|
Nos.
| |
-
|
Floor covering
|
:
|
1000
|
Nos.
|
-
|
Screen
|
: 1600
|
Mt.
| |
-
|
Durry
|
:
|
1500
|
Nos.
|
RAW MATERIALS
The
main raw material for the unit is banana tree which is abundantly
available in the State of Meghalaya, Mizoram, Arunachal Pradesh and
Assam.
1.
|
Cost of Banana Stem
|
:
|
1.40 lakhs
|
2.
|
Misc. items
|
:
|
0.20 lakhs
|
Total : 1.60 lakhs.
SUGGESTED LOCATION :
Banana growing areas in Assam, Meghalaya, Mizoram and Arunachal Pradesh.
PROCESS
Banana Fibre Processing and Weaving :
The
extraction of the natural fibre from the plant required certain care to
avoid damage. In the present experiments, initially the banana plant
sections were cut from the main stem of the plant and then rolled
lightly to remove the excess moisture. Impurities in the rolled fibres
such as pigments, broken fibres, coating of cellulose etc. were removed
manually by menas of comb, and then the fibres were cleaned and dried.
This
mechanical and manual extraction of banana fibres was tedious, time
consuming, and caused damage to the fibre. Consequently, this type of
technique cannot be recommended for industrial application. A special
machine was designed and developed for the extraction of banana fibres
in a mechanically automated manner. It consisted mainly of two
horizontal beams whereby a carriage with an attached and specially
designed comb, could move back and forth. The fibre extraction using
this technique could be performed simply by placing a cleaned part of
the banana stem on the fixed platform of the machine, and clamped at the
ends by jaws. This eliminated relative movement of the stem and avoided
premature breakage of the fibres. Thiswas followed by cleaning and drying of the fibres in a chamber at 20oC for three hours. This fibres were then labeled and ready for lamination process.
After extraction of fibre, weaving is done in the looms as per normal process like any other material.
MACHINERY
The major equipment required are :
Sl.No.
|
Particulars
|
Nos.
|
1.
|
Banana fibre extractor
|
2
|
2.
|
Loom complete with all accessories
|
4
|
3.
|
Bobbin circle
|
1
|
4.
|
Charkha
|
1
|
5.
|
Bobbin
|
100
|
6.
|
Pirn
|
100
|
7.
|
Shuttle
|
8
|
8.
|
Misc. items
|
L.S.
|
INFRASTRUCTURE
The major infrastructural requirement are :
Covered area
|
: 1200
|
Sq.ft.
| |
Power
|
:
|
5
|
KW.
|
TOTAL CAPITAL REQUIREMENT
The
total capital requirement including fixed capital and working capital
is estimated at Rs.1.70 lakhs as follows. Of this, the project cost
comprising fixed capital and margin money on working capital is Rs.1.55
lakhs.
(Rs. In lakh)
| |||
A
|
Fixed Capital :
| ||
Land and Building
|
Own
| ||
Plant and Machinery
|
0.90
| ||
Misc. fixed assets.
|
0.30
| ||
Preliminary &
|
0.10
| ||
Total(A) :
|
1.30
| ||
B.
|
Working Capital :
| ||
Raw materials & Packing materials
|
15 days
|
0.09
| |
Finished goods
|
15 days
|
0.20
| |
Working Expenses
|
1 month
|
0.16
| |
Receivables
|
15 days.
|
0.25
| |
Total (B) :
|
0.70
| ||
Total(A) + (B) :
|
1.70
|
Note : Working capital may be financed as :
| |||||||||
Bank Finance (65%)
|
Rs. 0.45 lakh
| ||||||||
Margin Money (35%)
|
Rs. 0.25 lakh.
| ||||||||
Total :
|
Rs.
|
0.70 lakh.
| |||||||
C.
|
Capital Cost of Projec
| ||||||||
Fixed Cost
|
:
|
Rs. 1.30 lakh
| |||||||
Margin Money for Working Capital.
|
:
|
Rs. 1.25 lakh
| |||||||
Total :
|
Rs. 1.55 lakh.
| ||||||||
MEANS OF FINANCE
| |||||||||
Promoter’s contribution (35%)
|
:
|
0.55 lakh
| |||||||
Term Loan (65%)
|
:
|
1.00 lakh.
| |||||||
Total :
|
1.55 lakh
| ||||||||
OPERATING EXPENSES
| |||||||||
The annual operating expenses are estimated at Rs 4.99 lakhs as given below :
| |||||||||
(Rs. in lakhs)
| |||||||||
1.
|
Raw materials
|
:
|
1.60
| ||||||
2.
|
Packing materials.
|
:
|
0.20
| ||||||
3.
|
Utilities
|
:
|
0.40
| ||||||
4.
|
Wages & Salaries
|
:
|
1.50
| ||||||
5.
|
Rent, Insurance etc.
|
:
|
0.30
| ||||||
6.
|
Other overheads.
|
:
|
0.35
| ||||||
8.
|
Selling expenses @ 5% on annual
| ||||||||
Sales.
|
:
|
0.33
| |||||||
8.
|
Interest on term loan @ 12.50%
|
:
|
0.13
| ||||||
9.
|
Interest on bank finance
| ||||||||
for working capital @11%.
|
:
|
0.05
| |||||||
10.
|
Depreciation 10% on M/c.
|
:
|
0.13
| ||||||
Total :
|
4.99
| ||||||||
SALES REALISATION
| |||||||||
Sl.
|
Items
|
Qnty.
|
Rates(Rs)
|
Value (Rs)
| |||||
No.
| |||||||||
1.
|
Door Mat (13’ x 22’)
|
1000 Nos.
|
60/-
|
0.60
| |||||
2.
|
Floor Covering (4’ x 6’)
|
1000 Nos.
|
300/-
|
3.00
| |||||
3.
|
Screen
|
1600 Nos.
|
50/-
|
0.80
| |||||
4.
|
Durry (2.5’ x 5.0’)
|
1500 Nos.
|
150/-
|
2,25
| |||||
Total
|
6.65
| ||||||||
PROFITABILITY
Based
on the sales realization of Rs 6.65 lakhs and the operating expenses of
Rs 4.99 lakhs, the profit at rated capacity utilization would be Rs
1.66 lakhs per year. This works out to be return on investment of 98%.
The unit will break even at about 31% of the targeted annual production.
HIGHLIGHTS
The major highlights of the project are as follows :
Total capital requirement
|
Rs.
|
1.70 lakhs.
|
Promoter’s contribution
|
Rs.
|
0.55 lakhs.
|
Annual Sales realization
|
Rs.
|
6.65 lakhs.
|
Annual operating expenses
|
Rs.
|
4.99 lakhs.
|
Annual Profit
|
Rs.
|
1.66 lakhs.
|
25%.
| ||
31%.
| ||
No. of persons employed.
|
8 Nos.
|
SUPPLIERS OF MACHINERY
Addresses of Machinery and Raw Material Suppliers :
Supplier of Banana Fibre Extractor :
M/s Andhra Pradesh Agro-Industries Dev. Corporation,
Hydrabad
Looms and other accessories are available in the local market.
Banana fibre emerging good business proposition
BANANA fibre extraction is emerging as a good business proposition in Tamil Nadu and Kerala following good demand for the fibre.
Especially,
three hamlets off Marthandam in Tamil Nadu — Thakkalai, Thiruvattaru
and Mathur — have become the centre for banana fibre wherein every
household of the village is engaged in the fibre extraction activity
eking out their livelihood.
``Manual
fibre extraction from the banana pseudostem is an arduous task,'' says
Ms Kalpana, a research associate at the National Research Centre for
Banana (NRCB) at Tiruchi.
Ms Kalpana, who is engaged in a project on physiochemical and structural characteristic of banana pseudostem told Business Line that
there was huge demand for the banana fibre, which was (blended with
other natural fibres) used in making a wide range of goods as cordage,
yarns, paper and paper cups, tea cups and tea bags, attractively
patterned cloth, handbags/purses and shoes.
A
tribute to the tear and tensile strength of banana fibre were the
Japanese yen notes printed on paper from the fibre of the banana
variety— abaca, she added.
``Because
of the huge demand in the markets abroad, the pseudostem is not junked
anymore,'' she said and pointed out that a kg of the fibre was bought
locally only for about Rs 50. ``However, the maximum quantity of fibre
that an individual can extract in a day would be just 500 g whereas in
the mechanical process the same quantity could be extracted in an
hour,'' she said.
Only
wooden boards and metal scrapper are used in the manual fibre
extraction process, Ms Kalpana said. NRCB had collaborated with a
Mumbai-based research institute for developing a low cost mechanical
device for the purpose.
According
to her, over 5 lakh hectares of area were under banana in India, and
the pseudostem alone would account for 28 million tonnes, from which the
fibre, if extracted should weigh around 2.2 million tonnes every year.
There are at least 117 different banana varieties. The fibre content in
the wild varieties is said to be more.
She
said that a survey conducted in the Nagercoil belt showed that four red
banana plants could yield one kg of fibre as against 10 plants of the
nendran variety. ``The fibre content is even less in commercial
varieties like robusta.''
Ref;http://365days365businessideas.blogspot.sg/2014/02/start-business-in-banana-fibre.html
Banana Fibre by Than Han on Scribd
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