Locally Called “Palo Santo” meaning “sacred wood” in Spanish, guaiacwood is traditionally used as an incense.
Paraguay is the largest producer and exporter of guaiacwood oil having first commercialised production in the late 1930’s.
It is also used in South America as a hard wood for furniture and over use in recent years has led to the product being CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species) restricted. This controls the amount of harvesting and regulates trade.
Guaiacwood grows in the Gran Chaco region of Paraguay. Its heartwood produces an essential oil with a woody, sweet, lactone odour, somewhat similar to some sandalwoods.
It’s a relatively inexpensive oil for the ‘woody’ ingredient family, making it a valuable essential oil for many fragrances especially in the detergent sector.
Its main components are sesquiterpene alcohols, guaiol and bulnesol, which make up about 85 % of the oil.
Guaiac wood, also known as Palo Santo, is a slow growing, broad leaf shrub, which is popular globally for possessing the most resilient and hardest wood in the world. Argentina and Paraguay are major producers of guaiac wood as the soil and climate in the region is conducive to the growth to this evergreen tree.
A mixture of wood and sawdust from the tree is steam distilled to produce guaiac wood oil.
There are no restrictions on guaiac wood oil from the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) of Wild Fauna and Flora. There is decent supply of oil in the market.
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