Project-Level SPVs

1. What Is a Project-Level SPV?

A Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) is a legally distinct entity created to:

  • Ring-fence financial risk
  • Isolate specific project assets
  • Attract targeted capital
  • Enable structured joint ventures
  • Enhance financial transparency

Each SPV operates with defined objectives, timelines, and performance metrics.

2. Why CAGI Uses SPVs

Within the agarwood ecosystem, project lifecycles vary significantly across:

  • Plantation development
  • Biotechnology programs
  • Extraction facilities
  • Digital traceability systems
  • Agricultural input production

SPVs allow each project to be capitalized and managed independently without exposing the entire holding company balance sheet to project-specific risk.

3. Structural Framework

Holding Company Level

CAGI retains:

  • Majority ownership (where applicable)
  • Strategic control
  • IP licensing authority
  • Capital allocation oversight

SPV Level

Each SPV maintains:

  • Defined asset ownership
  • Separate financial accounts
  • Project-specific management
  • Dedicated reporting structures

4. Typical SPV Categories

Plantation SPVs

Created for specific geographic agroforestry developments.

Purpose:

  • Land acquisition or lease
  • Tree cultivation and resin induction
  • Long-term biological asset management

Biotechnology SPVs

Structured for R&D initiatives.

Purpose:

  • Research commercialization
  • Patent development
  • Technology deployment

Processing & Extraction SPVs

Formed for infrastructure investments.

Purpose:

  • Facility construction
  • Oil extraction operations
  • Value-added processing

Digital & Traceability SPVs

Established for technology platforms.

Purpose:

  • Supply chain verification
  • ESG reporting systems
  • Blockchain traceability solutions

5. Capital Structure at the SPV Level

Each SPV may include:

  • Equity participation (CAGI + external partners)
  • Project-level financing or structured instruments
  • Revenue-sharing agreements
  • Strategic joint venture arrangements

Investors may participate:

  • Directly at the SPV level (project-specific exposure)
  • Indirectly via CAGI equity (diversified exposure)

6. Capital Flow Model

  1. CAGI forms and capitalizes the SPV.
  2. External capital may be introduced at the SPV level.
  3. The SPV executes the defined project.
  4. Revenues are generated at the SPV level.
  5. Profits flow back to CAGI through dividends, royalties, or management fees.
  6. CAGI may distribute returns to shareholders or reinvest.

7. Strategic Advantages

• Risk containment
• Capital efficiency
• Partnership flexibility
• Asset transparency
• Regulatory clarity
• Scalable replication across regions

SPVs enable modular growth — allowing CAGI to scale vertically and geographically without overconcentrating risk.

8. Governance & Oversight

To maintain structural integrity:

  • Board-level approval is required for SPV formation
  • Independent financial reporting is maintained
  • Performance milestones are defined pre-capitalization
  • Exit scenarios are structured at inception

Strategic Summary

Project-Level SPVs allow CAGI to:

  • Build infrastructure responsibly
  • Attract aligned strategic partners
  • Isolate project-specific risk
  • Maintain holding-level stability
  • Scale through disciplined capital deployment