May 07, 2014

07/05/14: Mühlenchemie starts development and production in India


The flour treatment specialist is investing in a trial bakery and production plant for enzyme and vitamin blends and baking premixes – Stern Ingredients India Private Limited will in future be in an even better position to meet the needs of the local milling industry.

Ahrensburg/ Umbergam, Gujarat. The region’s agriculture and its grain and food production are influenced by numerous local factors and constantly changing overall conditions. No two markets are the same. In order to meet the individual needs of the milling industry in India, the German company Mühlenchemie GmbH & Co. KG will in future run an additional development and production facility on the spot. In March 2014, Stern Ingredients India opened a new plant for this purpose in Umbergam, Gujarat, about 170 kilometres north of Mumbai. Besides housing a trial bakery and a production plant for enzyme and vitamin blends and baking premixes, this Stern Ingredients Technology and Innovation Centre (SITIC) will serve to adjust the solutions developed in Germany more precisely to the needs of the local market.
Grain and Sky
Grain and Sky (Photo credit: Conrad Kuiper)
The market is dominated by a large number of small and medium sized mills, run as family businesses. By setting up a production facility of its own, Mühlenchemie will in future be able to serve the Indian market faster and more individually. The modern rheological technology centre with a flour analysis 
and baking laboratory already employs a staff of 20. The production plant will be managed by Biren Palani; as the Managing Director and partner of Stern Ingredients India, Palani has years of experience in this market. Philipp Gertzen will intensify customer care in the post of General Manager India – Commercial. From the start he has helped to coordinate the establishment of the new facility from the local affiliate in Mumbai. Responsibility for production and the laboratory will lie with Uttam Waykar, who was previously employed by Salalah Mills in Oman for 15 years.
“The local mills are confronted with extremely complex challenges”, said Mühlenchemie’s Managing Director Lennart Kutschinski at the official opening. “What is more, the eating habits of the growing middle class of the world’s second largest population are changing meteorically. In this situation our local presence will help our customers ‘just in time’, with a high degree of flexibility and short routes.” The research and development work will be carried out at the Technology Centre of the company’s German headquarters in Ahrensburg, just outside Hamburg, where applications technologists and research scientists work on the solutions of tomorrow. “Cooperation between our research centre and the new facility in India opens up excellent prospects for the future; it will enable us to help our customers optimize their production processes and develop ideas for new products for the local market”, Kutschinski continued.
Harvested Grain in Winchester, Hampshire
Harvested Grain in Winchester, Hampshire (Photo credit: neilalderney123)
The company will have a trial bakery for international and Indian applications – equipped, for example, with tandoori ovens or halvas. There will also be a rheological laboratory with the usual instruments such as an extensograph, a farinograph and a Glutomatic system. A further feature will be a laboratory for pasta applications.
The equipment for making enzyme and vitamin blends is designed for an annual production of 2,000 tonnes.  
The new company Stern Ingredients India Private Limited will be Mühlenchemie’s sixth location with research and production capacity of its own after Germany, Russia, Mexico, Turkey and China. “Since we intend to offer our customers extra value with individual system solutions, local know-how with close customer relations and intensive consultancy are essential for our business”, says Lennart Kutschinski, explaining the firm’s international expansion. The company from Ahrensburg now operates in over 120 countries and maintains close partnerships with more than 1,000 mills.

English: India. Area controlled by India in da...
English: India. Area controlled by India in dark green; Claimed but uncontrolled territories in light green. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
 The Global Miller
This blog is maintained by The Global Miller staff and is supported by the magazine GFMT which is published by Perendale Publishers Limited.

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