ROI Snapshot: Replacing Propionic-Acid Treatments in Broiler Feed
~1 200 words — business-case primer for feed-mill owners, CFOs, nutritionists
Executive Summary (skip ahead if you want the math)
India’s poultry sector now consumes ~28 million tonnes of compound feed annually, 60 % of which is maize. With summer silo temperatures regularly topping 32 °C, most integrators add 2–3 kg of propionic-acid blends per tonne of finished feed as an insurance policy against molds and mycotoxins. The practice works—but at a hidden cost of ₹1 100–1 400 per tonne of feed in 2025 prices.
In contrast, refrigerated grain-cooling drives maize kernel temperatures below 13 °C before grinding, halting mold growth at the source. A mid-sized feed mill (30 t/h) can save up to ₹450 per tonne net and recover capital in < 18 months—all while boosting feed conversion ratios (FCR) by 1–2 points and meeting ever-tighter mycotoxin limits without chemical residues.
1. Why Propionic Acid Became the Default
Propionic acid gained traction in the 1990s for three reasons:
- Broad-spectrum antimycotic – active at pH < 5.5; disrupts fungal cell-wall synthesis.
- Heat-stable – survives conditioning temperatures in pelleting (80–90 °C).
- Regulatory acceptance – classified as GRAS in most markets.
A typical broiler formula targets 2 kg/tonne of a 60 % propionic + 20 % formic + buffers blend. With 2025 contract prices at ~₹72/kg (≈ €0.78), preservative cost alone lands at ₹144 per tonne of finished feed—before freight, handling, PPE, and corrosion-control overheads.
But here’s the blind spot: the acid doesn’t stop toxin biosynthesis inside grain kernels before grinding. If raw maize arrives at 25 ppb aflatoxin, propionic acid can’t reverse it. Mills therefore dose even higher to “play safe,” inflating cost.
2. Grain Cooling Economics in a Nutshell
| Parameter | Value | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Installed chiller capacity | 250 t/day (gT-250E) | Suits a 600 t/d compound-feed mill with 7-day maize buffer |
| CapEx (turn-key) | €180 000 | Incl. ducting, cables, VFD fans |
| Electricity use | 18 kWh/t for pull-down; 0.6 kWh/t/day holding | Indian tariff: ₹8.5/kWh |
| Annual maize volume cooled | 150 000 t | 70 % utilisation |
| Cooling Opex | ₹24.2 million/yr | 18 kWh × 150 000 t × ₹8.5 + demand charges |
| Propionic-acid cost avoided | ₹21.6 million/yr | (144 ₹/t × 150 000 t) |
Gap to close: ₹2.6 M/yr. That’s before counting improved FCR, reduced insecticides, and zero corrosion on mixers.
3. Hidden Financial Upsides
- Feed Conversion Ratio (FCR)
Cooler, toxin-free maize lifts broiler FCR by ≈ 0.02–0.03. At ₹45/kg liveweight and 50 million birds/year, that’s ₹33 M saved in feed per flock cycle. - Bulk-density premium
Lower mold damage keeps maize bulk density up 3–4 kg/hL; mills report 1 % pellet output gain. - Maintenance & Health
Acid fumes corrode mild-steel bins and staff PPE. Mills spend ~₹4 M/year on recoating and extractor-fan filters—costs vanish with chilling.
Add those deltas and the payback shrinks to 14–16 months.
4. Technical Comparison at a Glance
| Metric | Propionic-Acid Program | Refrigerated Grain Cooling |
|---|---|---|
| Mode of action | Lowers pH in finished feed; fungistatic | Stops fungal growth in raw grain; reduces kernel temperature |
| Upfront CapEx | Negligible | €0.7–1.2 M per 1 000 t/day capacity |
| Ongoing Cost | ₹140–200/t feed | ₹35–50/t maize (electricity) |
| Residue in feed | Yes (propionate salts) | None |
| Corrosion risk | High on mixers, conveyors | None |
| Efficacy on existing toxins | None | Prevents new toxins; cannot remove existing |
| Insect suppression | Indirect | Direct (reproduction stops < 15 °C) |
| Compliance trajectory | Increasing regulatory limits on propionates in EU broiler feed | Supports clean-label trend |
5. Case Study—Andhra Pradesh Integrator
A 26 t/h pellet line in Vijayawada processed 120 000 t maize/year. In 2024, they spent ₹18.4 M on propionic blend and ₹3 M replacing corroded conditioner screws.
After installing a gT-200E unit:
- Maize kernel temp: 31 °C → 12.8 °C in 72 h
- Electricity draw: 0.58 kWh/t/day holding
- Mycotoxin claims: zero PCR positives over 9 months
- Propionic blend reduced: 2 kg/t → 0.5 kg/t as a safety buffer
- Net savings: ₹19.2 M in Year 1, ROI 1.1 years
6. Implementation Blueprint
- Diagnostics – log silo-core temperatures and toxin baseline for 30 days.
- Sizing – pick chiller to pull entire bin stack < 13 °C in ≤ 7 days.
- Integration – route chilled air via under-floor plenums; PLC auto-start when any probe > 15 °C.
- Validation – weekly maize composite sample tested for aflatoxin (< 15 ppb) + moisture (< 14 %).
- Review – after 90 days, ratchet back preservative dosing to minimal spec.
7. FAQs for Finance & Nutrition Teams
Q1 : Will chilling overdry maize and mess with my grinding index?
A : No. Grain coolers operate at saturated humidity; kernel moisture drop is < 0.3 %—negligible for formula.
Q2 : Electricity costs are volatile—what if tariffs spike?
A 10 % tariff hike adds ~₹3.2 per t feed, still < 30 % of acid cost.
Q3 : Is propionic acid completely eliminated?
Most mills retain 0.5 kg/t as belt-mold insurance in wet monsoons; still a 75 % reduction.
8. Decision Matrix—When the Switch Makes Sense
| Condition | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Ambient temps > 25 °C for > 2 000 h/year | Go chilled |
| Maize toxin baseline > 10 ppb on arrival | Chilling + inbound QC |
| Electricity < ₹10/kWh | Strong ROI (< 18 mo) |
| CapEx constraints; small plant < 5 t/h | Stay with acids; revisit at expansion |
9. Action Step: Calculate Your Own Payback
Download our Grain-Chilling ROI Calculator (Excel, pre-loaded with regional energy tariffs and additive prices). Plug in:
- Annual maize tonnage
- Current preservative dose & price
- Local kWh tariff
- Planned chiller capacity
Let the sheet spit out NPV, IRR, and 5-year cashflow—in minutes.
Conclusion
The “acid vs. cold” debate boils down to physics and finance. Cooling maize below 13 °C neutralises fungi before they deploy their biochemical weapons. Once you price out the preservative drum, corrosion, animal-performance drag and export rejections, grain chilling emerges as the leaner, cleaner route—especially for high-throughput broiler integrators in hot-humid belts. With paybacks that often beat 18 months, it’s less a question of if and more of when.
Ready to crunch your numbers? Grab the calculator or schedule a quick demo with our engineering team.
References
- Feedinfo (2025). Global Acidifier Price Index — Q1 update.
- López-García, R. et al. (2024). “Comparative Efficacy of Organic Acids vs. Refrigeration on Fungal Growth in Stored Maize”. Journal of Stored Products Research, 101: 102–110.
- Grain Technik internal case archive—AP-VIJ-2024-07.

