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News (Media Awareness Project) - US HI: Column: Irrational Fear Sustains Taboo on Handy Hemp
Title:US HI: Column: Irrational Fear Sustains Taboo on Handy Hemp
Published On:2007-12-02
Source:Honolulu Star-Bulletin (HI)
Fetched On:2008-01-11 17:34:05
IRRATIONAL FEAR SUSTAINS TABOO ON HANDY HEMP

On Nov. 16, a Star-Bulletin editorial declared, "Judge should halt
DEA ban on hemp crops." The editors wisely noted that hemp is
different from its distant cousin, marijuana, in that hemp contains
only trace elements of the mind-altering chemical tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC.

The federal court case was brought by two North Dakota farmers, one a
long-time state legislator, who sued the Drug Enforcement Agency for
preventing them from growing industrial hemp. North Dakota law
authorizes industrial hemp production, as the state saw Canadian
farmers across the boarder reap the financial benefits of growing
this valuable crop for commercial and industrial use.

The federal judge just ruled in the case, unfortunately punting the
issue to Congress. The court stated: "Industrial hemp may not be the
terrible menace the DEA makes it out to be, but industrial hemp is
still considered to be a Schedule I controlled substance under the
current state of the law in this circuit and throughout the country."

In a presidential election year, it is highly unlikely that Congress
will exercise the leadership to authorize America's farmers to grow
industrial hemp. Yet hemp commercial products can reduce America's
carbon footprint and help to combat climate change.

Hemp, when combined with lime, creates one of the most sustainable
building materials in the world. Other industrialized nations
understand this. On Nov. 20, the Green Building Press featured an
award-winning warehouse in England that was built using hemp and lime
blocks instead of conventional concrete construction. The article noted:

"The lime and hemp combination has low embodied energy and produces
about a tenth of the carbon dioxide (CO2) of a conventional concrete
block. Hemp construction and the lime mortar and render reduce the
total CO2 emissions to around 150 tonnes. A building of similar size
constructed using more traditional methods would typically have
generated approximately 600 tonnes in CO2 emissions."

The warehouse, designed by structural engineers Faber Maunsell, won
the David Alsop Sustainability Award at the 2007 Structural Awards in
London. Engineers used wide-spanning glulam beams, built from lime
hemp blocks. Judges at the Structural Awards declared the building "a
stunning example of sustainable design," and the warehouse is widely
recognized as the greenest building of its type in Britain.

The U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's final report
shows that global warming is unequivocal, with rising sea levels
inevitable. As Hawaii does its part to reduce carbon emissions,
industrial hemp should be an easy and obvious way for us to achieve
carbon reduction targets.

Innovation in how we obtain building materials will create jobs in
the agricultural and building industries while reducing Hawaii's CO2
emissions. Just as it's smart to eat locally grown foods, it's
equally smart to build with locally grown agricultural products.

The founders of our nation knew the value of hemp. George Washington
and Thomas Jefferson were hemp farmers, as were the Mormons who
settled in Utah. It is time to revive this crop as Hawaii (and, one
would hope, the other 49 states) take action to reduce CO2 emissions
through growing and building with environmental friendly industrial
hemp. Congress should not punt on this important issue.
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