Palm oil color is a key quality indicator. After refining, oil should look bright yellow, golden yellow, or light red-yellow, but some refineries still face dark oil problems.
This may reduce product value and affect uses such as cooking oil, margarine, shortening, soap, and food processing. Common causes include poor crude oil quality, weak degumming or bleaching, improper deodorization, unstable temperature or vacuum, low-quality bleaching earth, and poor storage.

Poor Quality of Crude Palm Oil
The final color of refined palm oil is strongly affected by the quality of crude palm oil. If the crude palm oil is already very dark, highly oxidized, or has high free fatty acid content, it becomes more difficult to obtain a bright final product.
Fresh crude palm oil naturally contains carotenoids, which give palm oil its reddish-orange color. These pigments can be reduced during bleaching and deodorization. However, if the crude oil is produced from overripe fruit, rotten fruit, poor sterilization, or long storage, the color may become much darker.
Common crude oil problems
- High free fatty acid content
- High moisture and impurities
- Oxidized oil
- Overheated crude oil
- Oil from poor-quality fruit bunches
- Long storage before refining
- Contamination with dirt, sludge, or metal particles
| Crude Palm Oil Problem | Effect on Final Oil Color | Common Cause |
| High FFA content | Darker refined oil | Delayed processing or poor fruit quality |
| High moisture | Promotes hydrolysis and oxidation | Poor clarification or storage |
| High impurities | Difficult bleaching and filtration | Incomplete crude oil cleaning |
| Oxidized oil | Brown or dull color | Long storage or air exposure |
| Overheated crude oil | Deep red or brown color | Improper heating during extraction |
If the raw oil quality is poor, even a complete palm oil refining line may not achieve the desired color. Therefore, quality control should begin before refining.
Incomplete Degumming
Degumming is used to remove phospholipids, gums, proteins, and some metal ions from crude palm oil. Although palm oil has fewer gums than soybean oil or rapeseed oil, degumming is still important in many refining processes.
If gums are not removed properly, they may interfere with bleaching. Gums can cover pigment particles or react during heating, making the oil color darker. Incomplete degumming may also cause poor filtration, higher oil loss, and unstable refining performance.
Signs of poor degumming
- Oil becomes cloudy after heating
- Bleaching earth consumption increases
- Filter blockage happens frequently
- Refined oil color is dull
- Deodorized oil has poor brightness
| Degumming Factor | Possible Problem | Suggested Action |
| Too little acid | Gums not fully hydrated | Adjust phosphoric acid or citric acid dosage |
| Poor mixing | Uneven gum reaction | Improve mixing time and intensity |
| Wrong temperature | Low reaction efficiency | Control proper degumming temperature |
| Short retention time | Incomplete gum removal | Extend reaction time |
| High moisture residue | Dark color during heating | Improve drying before bleaching |
Good degumming helps reduce the burden on the bleaching section and improves final oil clarity.
Incorrect Bleaching Process
Bleaching is the key step for removing pigments from palm oil. During bleaching, activated bleaching earth, activated carbon, or other adsorbents are used to remove carotenoids, oxidation products, trace metals, soaps, and other color-causing substances.
If the bleaching process is not properly controlled, palm oil may remain dark after refining.
Main bleaching problems
- Insufficient bleaching earth dosage
If the dosage is too low, pigments cannot be fully absorbed. - Poor bleaching earth quality
Low-quality bleaching earth has weak adsorption ability. - Wrong bleaching temperature
If the temperature is too low, adsorption is not effective. The oil may discolour or oxidise if it is too high. - Short bleaching time
Pigments need enough contact time with bleaching earth. - Poor vacuum condition
Bleaching under poor vacuum may cause oxidation and color reversion. - Incomplete filtration
Residual bleaching earth in oil can make the oil appear dull or cloudy.
| Bleaching Parameter | Typical Control Range | Problem If Improper |
| Bleaching temperature | About 90–110°C | Poor adsorption or oil darkening |
| Bleaching time | About 20–40 minutes | Incomplete pigment removal |
| Vacuum level | High vacuum recommended | Oxidation and dark color |
| Bleaching earth dosage | Depends on crude oil quality | Too low causes dark oil; too high increases oil loss |
| Filtration | Clear oil after filter | Residual earth affects color |
The bleaching section should be adjusted according to the quality of crude palm oil. Darker crude oil usually needs stronger bleaching conditions or higher-quality adsorbent.
Poor Bleaching Earth Selection
Not all bleaching earth is suitable for palm oil refining. Some bleaching earth is designed for light vegetable oils, while palm oil contains a high level of natural carotenoids. Therefore, palm oil usually requires bleaching earth with strong pigment adsorption capacity.
Poor bleaching earth may cause high consumption but poor color improvement. In some cases, the oil still appears dark even after adding more bleaching earth.
How to choose bleaching earth for palm oil
- Select bleaching earth suitable for high-carotene oils
- Test adsorption capacity before bulk purchase
- Check moisture content
- Avoid bleaching earth with unstable quality
- Store it in a dry place
- Do small laboratory trials before production adjustment
| Bleaching Earth Issue | Result | Solution |
| Low activity | Poor color removal | Use activated bleaching earth |
| High moisture | Foaming and poor adsorption | Store in dry conditions |
| Wrong particle size | Poor filtration | Choose refinery-grade material |
| Unstable batch quality | Color fluctuation | Use reliable suppliers |
| Too much dosage | High oil loss | Optimize by lab test |
Using more bleaching earth is not always the best solution. The correct approach is to select the right adsorbent and optimize temperature, vacuum, time, and dosage together.
High Oxidation During Refining
Oxidation is another major reason for dark palm oil color. When palm oil contacts oxygen at high temperature, oxidation reactions may occur. These reactions produce dark-colored compounds and unpleasant odors.
Oxidation may happen during crude oil storage, preheating, degumming, bleaching, deodorization, or final oil storage.
Causes of oxidation
- Air leakage in the refining system
- Poor vacuum during bleaching or deodorization
- Long heating time
- Too high processing temperature
- Oil exposed to air in storage tanks
- Lack of nitrogen protection
- Dirty tanks or old oil residue
Oxidized oil is more difficult to bleach. It may also suffer from color reversion, meaning the oil becomes darker again after storage.
| Oxidation Source | Color Effect | Preventive Measure |
| Air leakage | Darker oil | Check seals, pumps, valves, and pipelines |
| Long heating time | Brownish color | Reduce unnecessary heating |
| Poor vacuum | Oxidation during bleaching | Maintain stable vacuum |
| High storage temperature | Color reversion | Store oil at suitable temperature |
| Old oil residue | Contamination | Clean tanks regularly |
To control color, the refinery should reduce oil exposure to oxygen as much as possible.
Deodorization Temperature Is Too Low or Too High
Deodorization is mainly used to remove odor, free fatty acids, volatile compounds, and some remaining color bodies. For palm oil, deodorization also helps break down part of the carotenoids, improving final color.
If the deodorization temperature is too low, carotenoids may not be sufficiently destroyed. As a result, the oil remains red or dark orange. If the temperature is too high or the heating time is too long, the oil may become darker because of thermal degradation.
Deodorization control points
- Temperature
- Vacuum level
- Direct steam quality
- Deodorization time
- Oil flow rate
- Heat transfer efficiency
- Equipment cleanliness
| Deodorization Problem | Possible Color Result | Solution |
| Temperature too low | Red or orange oil | Increase temperature within safe process range |
| Temperature too high | Brown or burnt color | Avoid overheating |
| Poor vacuum | Oxidation and dull color | Improve vacuum system |
| Insufficient steam stripping | Odor and poor color | Check steam distribution |
| Long residence time | Heat damage | Optimize production flow |
The deodorization process must balance color removal, oil quality, nutrient retention, and operating cost.
Poor Vacuum System
Both bleaching and deodorization usually require vacuum conditions. If the vacuum system is unstable, oxygen may remain in the oil and cause oxidation. Poor vacuum also reduces deodorization efficiency and may lead to dark color, high odor, and poor shelf life.
Possible vacuum system problems
- Vacuum pump capacity is too small
- Air leakage in pipeline connections
- Poor sealing of equipment
- Condenser not working efficiently
- Cooling water temperature too high
- Steam ejector malfunction
- Blocked vacuum pipeline
A stable vacuum system is essential for producing light-colored refined palm oil.
| Vacuum Problem | Production Impact | Inspection Point |
| Air leakage | Oxidation and dark oil | Flanges, valves, manholes |
| Weak vacuum pump | Poor deodorization | Pump performance |
| Poor condenser | Low vacuum efficiency | Cooling water and condenser tubes |
| Steam ejector issue | Vacuum fluctuation | Steam pressure and nozzle |
| Blocked pipeline | Unstable operation | Vacuum line cleaning |
Operators should monitor vacuum level continuously instead of checking it only when color problems appear.
Improper Temperature Control
Temperature control affects every stage of palm oil refining. If the oil is heated too much, held too long, or exposed to air at high temperature, the color may become darker.
High temperature can accelerate oxidation, polymerization, and pigment transformation. Low temperature may reduce reaction efficiency, especially in degumming and bleaching.
Temperature-related mistakes
- Heating crude oil too long before refining
- Bleaching at excessive temperature
- Deodorizing at unstable temperature
- Poor heat exchanger control
- Local overheating inside equipment
- Repeated heating and cooling of the same oil batch
| Refining Stage | Temperature Risk | Color Problem |
| Preheating | Overheating | Early oxidation |
| Degumming | Too low or too high | Poor gum removal or darkening |
| Bleaching | Excessive temperature | Oil oxidation |
| Filtration | Temperature drop | Poor filtration and dull oil |
| Deodorization | Unstable temperature | Red color or burnt color |
Good temperature control requires reliable instruments, skilled operators, and proper process design.
After Neutralisation, Soap Residue
Caustic soda is used in chemical refinement to counteract free fatty acids. If washing and separation are not complete, soap residue may remain in the oil. Soap can reduce bleaching efficiency and cause cloudy or dark refined oil.
Soap residue may also increase oil loss and make filtration more difficult.
Causes of soap residue
- Wrong alkali concentration
- Poor mixing during neutralization
- Incomplete separation
- Insufficient washing
- Poor centrifuge performance
- High oil loss in soapstock
| Neutralization Issue | Effect on Oil | Solution |
| Excess caustic soda | High soap residue | Optimize alkali dosage |
| Poor separation | Soap remains in oil | Check centrifuge condition |
| Insufficient washing | Poor color and taste | Improve washing process |
| High moisture after washing | Oxidation risk | Dry oil properly |
| Unstable feed flow | Uneven reaction | Control flow and mixing |
For chemical refining, soap content should be checked before bleaching.
Color Reversion During Storage
Sometimes palm oil looks acceptable immediately after refining but becomes darker after storage. This is called color reversion. It may be caused by oxidation, trace metals, residual pigments, high storage temperature, or poor tank cleaning.
How to reduce color reversion
- Store refined oil in clean tanks
- Avoid long exposure to air
- Use nitrogen blanketing if necessary
- Keep storage temperature stable
- Remove trace metals during refining
- Avoid mixing new refined oil with old oxidized oil
- Use suitable packaging materials
| Storage Condition | Risk | Recommended Control |
| High temperature | Faster oxidation | Keep oil in controlled storage |
| Air exposure | Darkening and rancidity | Use sealed tanks |
| Dirty tanks | Contamination | Clean regularly |
| Metal contamination | Oxidation catalyst | Use proper tank material |
| Long storage time | Color decline | Manage inventory properly |
Storage management is part of oil quality control, not just a logistics issue.

Practical Checklist: How to Solve Dark Palm Oil After Refining
When the palm oil color is too dark, the refinery should not only increase the bleaching earth immediately. A systematic inspection is more effective.
Step-by-step troubleshooting list
- Test crude palm oil quality
- Check FFA, moisture, impurities, and peroxide value
- Review degumming temperature, acid dosage, and mixing
- Check soap residue before bleaching
- Test the bleaching earth quality and dosage
- Confirm bleaching temperature and retention time
- Check the vacuum level during bleaching
- Inspect filtration clarity
- Review deodorization temperature and vacuum
- Check storage tanks and final oil handling
- Compare lab bleaching results with production results
- Record each batch for future adjustment
| Problem Area | Key Test or Check | Corrective Action |
| Crude oil quality | FFA, moisture, impurities | Improve raw oil selection |
| Degumming | Gum and phosphorus residue | Adjust acid and mixing |
| Neutralization | Soap content | Improve washing and separation |
| Bleaching | Color before/after bleaching | Optimize earth, time, vacuum |
| Deodorization | Final color and odor | Adjust temperature and vacuum |
| Storage | Color change over time | Reduce oxidation |
Dark palm oil after refining may result from poor crude oil quality, incomplete degumming, weak bleaching, poor vacuum, oxidation, wrong deodorization conditions, soap residue, or improper storage.
For refinery operators, color control should be managed as a full-process issue. Instead of simply adding more bleaching earth, it is better to improve raw material quality, optimize each refining stage, maintain stable vacuum and temperature, and ensure proper storage.
A well-designed palm oil refinery plant helps remove pigments and impurities, control oxidation, and produce refined palm oil with stable color, good clarity, and reliable market quality.