1. Agarwood Value Chain Overview
Agarwood products are derived from resinous heartwood of Aquilaria trees. The value chain spans from cultivation and resin induction to processing and high-value product creation.
Step 1: Cultivation & Plantation
- Species: Native (A. malaccensis, A. cumingiana)
- Planting Systems:
- Monoculture plantations
- Agroforestry integration (with coffee, coconut, or timber trees)
- Key Inputs: Land, seedlings, soil preparation, irrigation, fertilizers
- Sustainability Notes: Avoid wild harvesting; promote CITES compliance and traceability
Step 2: Resin Induction & Harvesting
- Methods:
- Fungal inoculation (Fusarium spp., MnO₂-enhanced blends)
- Mechanical wounding
- Combined biotic + abiotic stress methods
- Resin Maturation: 2–10 years depending on method and tree age
- Harvesting: Trees are felled or pruned for resinous heartwood extraction
Step 3: Primary Processing
- Chipping:
- Heartwood cut into small chips (2–10 cm)
- Sorted by color, density, and resin content
- Grading:
- Superior grade: Dark, resin-saturated, aromatic
- Lower grade: Lightly resinous; used for incense or blending
Step 4: Secondary Processing
| Product | Method | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Agarwood Oil (Attar / Oud oil) | Steam distillation, hydro-distillation, or solvent extraction | High-value; purity determines price; small yield per kg of wood |
| Incense | Powdered chips or oil blended with gums & resins | Widely used in spiritual, cultural, and ceremonial contexts |
| Perfumery | Oil fraction refined for luxury fragrances | Blended with other essential oils; used in niche/high-end perfume markets |
| Wellness Products | Aromatherapy oils, candles, diffusers, skincare | Growing demand in holistic wellness markets; low-volume, high-margin |
Step 5: Tertiary & End-Market Applications
- Domestic Markets: Religious, cultural, artisanal, perfumery
- International Markets: Middle East, East Asia, EU luxury perfumery, aromatherapy
- Market Drivers: Scarcity of wild agarwood, premium pricing, sustainability certification, traceability
Step 6: Byproducts & Circular Economy
- Residual wood chips: Fuel for smoke, small-scale incense
- Leaves and bark: Experimental use in herbal teas, essential oil research
- Carbon credits: Plantation-based carbon sequestration projects add financial value
8. Value Chain Flow Diagram (Conceptual)
Seedlings / Plantation
│
▼
Resin Induction (fungal/chemical/mechanical)
│
▼
Harvesting (heartwood)
│
▼
Primary Processing (chipping, grading)
│
├─► Agarwood Chips (raw trade)
│
├─► Oil Extraction (distillation/solvent)
│ ├─► Perfumery
│ └─► Wellness / Aromatherapy
│
└─► Incense (powdered or chips)
Key Observations
- Chips: Entry-level, widely traded, moderate value
- Oil: Highest-value product, requires specialized processing
- Incense: Cultural and ceremonial demand; moderate to high volume
- Perfumery & Wellness: Luxury and niche markets; high margin
- Sustainability & Traceability: Critical for market access (CITES compliance, ethical sourcing, FSC or ISO certification)
