Friday, October 11, 2013

Cultivated Agarwood in Today’s World

Long prized for its unique properties, agarwood is becoming more and more difficult to obtain. Over-harvesting, encroaching civilization, and environmental changes have greatly reduced the population of agarwood, but the demand for it is still very much alive. There are several species of evergreen which can produce agarwood, and most are listed as vulnerable and near threatened. Today, the agarwood producing trees are confined to the regions of Kampuchea (formerly Cambodia), Laos, Burma, and Vietnam.

The agarwood, or aquilaria malaccensis, which is the primary source, is a variety of evergreen found in Southeast Asia. The tree’s heartwood becomes infected with a peculiar type of mold, which creates a thick secretion of sap and darkens the wood. This secretion makes the wood extremely hard and durable, and it is this incarnation that is much sought after. The resinous sap is extremely aromatic, and has no equal. Prior to the tree becoming infected, it is a light colored wood of medium density. In this form, the wood is less desirable, and thus, less valuable. Only 6 to 8% of the trees that produce the coveted wood are infected with the mold, but artificial introduction of the spores to “clean” trees is sometimes implemented.

Agarwood is used primarily in the production of incense, perfume, medicines, and other essential oil products. It is believed to be an aphrodisiac, and has been used for centuries in religious ceremonies. One of the earliest known usages was documented in the Sanskrit Vedas that originated in India. Chinese chronicles from the Wu dynasty in the 3rd century include references to the agarwood’s cultivation in what is now known as central Vietnam.

In more primitive areas, it can take up to a week on foot to find the first infected tree. The trek is fraught with everything you would expect in a jungle, and malaria is a real concern. Most of the time, harvesting takes place on an outcropping or cliff, and the work itself is dangerous and difficult. The wood is toted out on the backs of the reapers, each man carrying up to 75 kilos of wood.

The harvested wood is used for distilling to get the valuable oil. The most common form of agarwood (oud) oil extraction is to use a steam distillation method. This effectively dissolves the resin and is collected in batches. In order to extract 20 ml of oil, around 70 kg of wood must be harvested. The wood is distilled for up to a week to extract the coveted oils.

Dead or dying live wood is not distillable. However, it is sold at a higher premium and is usually powdered to make incense or manufactured into cultivated agarwood chips to make various other products. Some really infected wood is so permeated with resin, that if you use a sharp knife and slice off a thin piece, it will curl like hard wax. It is not uncommon for powdered agarwood chips to be used in medicines that are taken internally, for example.

Whatever the use or application, you can be sure that cultivated agarwood will continue to increase in value as the supplies get smaller.