News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Hemp Industry May Blossom |
Title: | US: Hemp Industry May Blossom |
Published On: | 2004-10-17 |
Source: | San Diego Union Tribune (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-21 20:01:01 |
HEMP INDUSTRY MAY BLOSSOM
Change In Legal Status Could Allow Proliferation Of U.S. Products
'There's hemp oil in this? You're kidding! I've been buying this soap
for years and never realized that," Tamra Miller said.
She was at the Ocean Beach People's Organic Food Market examining the
label of a gallon jug of "Dr. Bronner's 18-in-1 Pure Castile Soap." A
key ingredient is hemp oil made from the first cousin of the marijuana
plant.
"I buy it for the kids at my daughter's school. Maybe they're just a
little bit happier washing their hands with this stuff," Miller said
with a smile.
Hemp is the highly versatile member of the cannabis-plant family that
doesn't get you high. It remains a four-letter word as far as the
federal government's war on drugs is concerned.
But hemp's legal status in the United States has quietly undergone a
dramatic change.
Without comment, much less fanfare, the Drug Enforcement
Administration last month let pass a deadline to appeal its case for
banning consumable hemp products to the U.S. Supreme Court.
A three-year effort to get hemp seed, hemp oil, lip balm, cereals,
breads, frozen waffles and other consumable products made from
imported hemp removed from America's markets ended when the government
quit pursuing its ban.
Hemp advocates, including hundreds of niche business and agricultural
backers in more than a dozen states, note the plant is water
efficient, soil-enriching, pest-resistant and a remarkably useful
source of products from essential fatty acids in hemp oil to textiles
and building products.
Consumable hemp products contain trace amounts of THC, the
psycho-active property in marijuana. That's why the DEA in October
2001 proposed to ban such products, which are imported from Canada and
nations in Europe and Asia where cultivation and production of
"industrial hemp" is legal even though marijuana remains outlawed.
But the Hemp Industries Association - 250 U.S. companies offering
products like protein bars, milk-free cheese, granola, bulk hemp seed,
hemp oil and veggie burgers with trace amounts of THC from
non-psycho-active cannabis plants - challenged the ban.
The hempsters relied on the argument that the non-narcotic variety of
poppy seeds contains trace amounts of opiates, yet are widely consumed
and perfectly legal.
As with poppy seeds, advocates argued, there's not enough THC present
to get consumers high if they ate a truckload of hemp-based products.
The U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco agreed,
blocking the DEA's proposed ban.
A Drug Enforcement Administration spokesman referred inquiries to the
Department of Justice, which did not return phone messages seeking
comment. The DEA argued in court that any product containing THC
should be considered a controlled substance and prohibited under U.S.
drug laws.
"All the facts were on our side - industrial hemp has never been
psychoactive," said David Bronner, whose Escondido-based Dr. Bronner's
Magic Soaps donated $200,000 to the fight against the DEA's ban.
"But the market really suffered. There was a grace period before the
DEA's ban was to go into effect (in March 2002), and retailers
everywhere were pulling their products because of this cloud in the
marketplace, with potential product recalls and DEA busts looming."
As the grace period was about to expire last year, the 9th Circuit
court issued a stay, temporarily blocking the DEA ban and placing the
hemp industry into limbo.
"We were within two days from having to pull our (10 lines) of hemp
products," said Nancy Casady, general manager of the Ocean Beach
People's Market. "It took a lot of money and effort to get the
government to finally realize we are talking about something quite
different from marijuana."
Though hemp advocates are cheering the end of the ban, they bemoan the
fact that the hemp-products industry in the United States has fallen
far behind Canada and the European Union.
"Canada provides the best example of what we expect to see the in
U.S.," said Bronner. "They haven't had government harassment up there
for the past five years, and hemp products have crossed over into the
mainstream."
Casady sees great days ahead for hemp retailers.
"I predict a big boom in the use of hemp oil and hemp seeds," she
said. "Hemp is impervious to pests and doesn't require harmful
pesticides. It can grow just about anywhere. It's good for the soil
and incredibly useful.
"Hemp is really a miracle plant when you learn about
it."
Cannabis sativa, Latin for "the useful hemp," is synonymous with the
mind-altering drug marijuana. But throughout history, the cannabis
plant has been far more useful than as a means to get stoned.
Recent arguments for the medical benefits of THC-laden marijuana
aside, the hemp plant has for thousands of years provided fiber for
everything from rope to textiles, paper to building supplies, in
addition to foodstuffs.
George Washington and Thomas Jefferson were hemp farmers.
In 1937, as synthetic fibers were taking over the textile industry and
use of hemp declined, the government passed the Marihuana Tax Act,
outlawing cultivation of the psychoactive form of cannabis.
Industrial hemp was excluded from the act, however, and cultivation of
it remained legal. During World War II, the "Hemp for Victory"
campaign spurred a surge in hemp farming, and the cannabis fiber was
used to make soldiers' boots, rucksacks and other essentials.
Industrial hemp, known as "ditch weed," still grows wild throughout
the Midwest and other farm states (the government budgets $13 million
annually to eradicate it.)
Even hemp backers, who hope to greatly expand the estimated
$7-million-a-year industry, acknowledge that the plant cannot supplant
every oil, seed and fiber on the market. It is not ideal as a cooking
oil, for instance, and oil from flax (which has flavor issues) and
other grains may provide more essential fats.
Hemp advocates merely want an even playing field on which to compete
with other foodstuffs and fibers, one without the stigma attached to a
psychoactive drug.
In 1970, Congress passed the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention Act,
superseding the 1937 law. It made no provision distinguishing
industrial hemp from marijuana, meaning domestic cultivation of all
forms of the cannabis sativa plant was illegal.
The Drug Enforcement Administration's position is that industrial-hemp
plants - which are generally taller and have different leaves - are
difficult to distinguish from marijuana plants, especially from
helicopters and spotter planes.
The government contends a hemp farmer could easily mix marijuana into
his hemp field (though it would not be wise because cross-pollinating
hemp plants would weaken the pot plants' potency).
"At first blush, the government's argument seems reasonable," said
Alexis Baden-Meyer, spokeswoman for Vote Hemp, the lobbying arm of the
hemp industry. "It would be a big problem for law enforcement if it
had to prove every time that the 'leafy substance' confiscated was
pot, and not legally grown industrial hemp.
"But the way Canada and other nations do it is to test the plants on
the farm. The bill we're proposing would allow hemp to be grown only
by licensed farmers using certified seed. State and federal officials
could go to the farm and test at any time. It works in Europe, in
Australia and New Zealand, and throughout Asia where industrial hemp
is grown."
Albert Lewis, owner of Descanso-based Hempy's, makes pants, shirts,
backpacks, wallets and hats from hemp-based textiles he imports from
China and Romania.
He said industrial hemp grown domestically would significantly lower
his costs - and the price of his products - while providing a viable,
environmentally friendly industry and American jobs.
"The DEA's decision to drop its ban is an important symbolic victory,"
Lewis said. "The Administration talks about freedom, opportunity,
ingenuity and free enterprise. Here's an industry that fits all those
categories, and yet there was a strong effort to stamp it out.
"Dropping the ban is a victory for freedom, the American spirit and
American values."
David Bronner and other advocates of consumable hemp products note
that hemp oil is an excellent alternative source of omega-3s - the
essential fatty acids found in fish oils - for those concerned about
mercury and other toxins in fish.
Adding omega-3s to the diet "seems to lower the risk of heart attacks
because omega-3 fatty acids reduce the clotting tendency of the blood
and improve cholesterol profiles," according to Dr. Andrew Weil, the
natural-foods booster and best-selling author.
"They also have a natural anti-inflammatory effect that makes them
useful for people with arthritis and autoimmune disorders."
Eyeing a bottle of hemp oil at the Ocean Beach People's Market, Jan
Hall said she learned about the benefits of hemp from her
granddaughter, Camille Berry, a freshman majoring in biochemistry at
UCSD.
"She's kind of a little hippie, like we all used to be in the '60s,"
Hall said, smiling. "She's told me about all sorts of uses for hemp -
everything from powering a diesel engine to moisturizing creams - and
she has caused me to think it is a really good substance.
"It was banned for some sort of connection to the drug culture. It
seems to me that's kind of a shame."
Change In Legal Status Could Allow Proliferation Of U.S. Products
'There's hemp oil in this? You're kidding! I've been buying this soap
for years and never realized that," Tamra Miller said.
She was at the Ocean Beach People's Organic Food Market examining the
label of a gallon jug of "Dr. Bronner's 18-in-1 Pure Castile Soap." A
key ingredient is hemp oil made from the first cousin of the marijuana
plant.
"I buy it for the kids at my daughter's school. Maybe they're just a
little bit happier washing their hands with this stuff," Miller said
with a smile.
Hemp is the highly versatile member of the cannabis-plant family that
doesn't get you high. It remains a four-letter word as far as the
federal government's war on drugs is concerned.
But hemp's legal status in the United States has quietly undergone a
dramatic change.
Without comment, much less fanfare, the Drug Enforcement
Administration last month let pass a deadline to appeal its case for
banning consumable hemp products to the U.S. Supreme Court.
A three-year effort to get hemp seed, hemp oil, lip balm, cereals,
breads, frozen waffles and other consumable products made from
imported hemp removed from America's markets ended when the government
quit pursuing its ban.
Hemp advocates, including hundreds of niche business and agricultural
backers in more than a dozen states, note the plant is water
efficient, soil-enriching, pest-resistant and a remarkably useful
source of products from essential fatty acids in hemp oil to textiles
and building products.
Consumable hemp products contain trace amounts of THC, the
psycho-active property in marijuana. That's why the DEA in October
2001 proposed to ban such products, which are imported from Canada and
nations in Europe and Asia where cultivation and production of
"industrial hemp" is legal even though marijuana remains outlawed.
But the Hemp Industries Association - 250 U.S. companies offering
products like protein bars, milk-free cheese, granola, bulk hemp seed,
hemp oil and veggie burgers with trace amounts of THC from
non-psycho-active cannabis plants - challenged the ban.
The hempsters relied on the argument that the non-narcotic variety of
poppy seeds contains trace amounts of opiates, yet are widely consumed
and perfectly legal.
As with poppy seeds, advocates argued, there's not enough THC present
to get consumers high if they ate a truckload of hemp-based products.
The U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco agreed,
blocking the DEA's proposed ban.
A Drug Enforcement Administration spokesman referred inquiries to the
Department of Justice, which did not return phone messages seeking
comment. The DEA argued in court that any product containing THC
should be considered a controlled substance and prohibited under U.S.
drug laws.
"All the facts were on our side - industrial hemp has never been
psychoactive," said David Bronner, whose Escondido-based Dr. Bronner's
Magic Soaps donated $200,000 to the fight against the DEA's ban.
"But the market really suffered. There was a grace period before the
DEA's ban was to go into effect (in March 2002), and retailers
everywhere were pulling their products because of this cloud in the
marketplace, with potential product recalls and DEA busts looming."
As the grace period was about to expire last year, the 9th Circuit
court issued a stay, temporarily blocking the DEA ban and placing the
hemp industry into limbo.
"We were within two days from having to pull our (10 lines) of hemp
products," said Nancy Casady, general manager of the Ocean Beach
People's Market. "It took a lot of money and effort to get the
government to finally realize we are talking about something quite
different from marijuana."
Though hemp advocates are cheering the end of the ban, they bemoan the
fact that the hemp-products industry in the United States has fallen
far behind Canada and the European Union.
"Canada provides the best example of what we expect to see the in
U.S.," said Bronner. "They haven't had government harassment up there
for the past five years, and hemp products have crossed over into the
mainstream."
Casady sees great days ahead for hemp retailers.
"I predict a big boom in the use of hemp oil and hemp seeds," she
said. "Hemp is impervious to pests and doesn't require harmful
pesticides. It can grow just about anywhere. It's good for the soil
and incredibly useful.
"Hemp is really a miracle plant when you learn about
it."
Cannabis sativa, Latin for "the useful hemp," is synonymous with the
mind-altering drug marijuana. But throughout history, the cannabis
plant has been far more useful than as a means to get stoned.
Recent arguments for the medical benefits of THC-laden marijuana
aside, the hemp plant has for thousands of years provided fiber for
everything from rope to textiles, paper to building supplies, in
addition to foodstuffs.
George Washington and Thomas Jefferson were hemp farmers.
In 1937, as synthetic fibers were taking over the textile industry and
use of hemp declined, the government passed the Marihuana Tax Act,
outlawing cultivation of the psychoactive form of cannabis.
Industrial hemp was excluded from the act, however, and cultivation of
it remained legal. During World War II, the "Hemp for Victory"
campaign spurred a surge in hemp farming, and the cannabis fiber was
used to make soldiers' boots, rucksacks and other essentials.
Industrial hemp, known as "ditch weed," still grows wild throughout
the Midwest and other farm states (the government budgets $13 million
annually to eradicate it.)
Even hemp backers, who hope to greatly expand the estimated
$7-million-a-year industry, acknowledge that the plant cannot supplant
every oil, seed and fiber on the market. It is not ideal as a cooking
oil, for instance, and oil from flax (which has flavor issues) and
other grains may provide more essential fats.
Hemp advocates merely want an even playing field on which to compete
with other foodstuffs and fibers, one without the stigma attached to a
psychoactive drug.
In 1970, Congress passed the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention Act,
superseding the 1937 law. It made no provision distinguishing
industrial hemp from marijuana, meaning domestic cultivation of all
forms of the cannabis sativa plant was illegal.
The Drug Enforcement Administration's position is that industrial-hemp
plants - which are generally taller and have different leaves - are
difficult to distinguish from marijuana plants, especially from
helicopters and spotter planes.
The government contends a hemp farmer could easily mix marijuana into
his hemp field (though it would not be wise because cross-pollinating
hemp plants would weaken the pot plants' potency).
"At first blush, the government's argument seems reasonable," said
Alexis Baden-Meyer, spokeswoman for Vote Hemp, the lobbying arm of the
hemp industry. "It would be a big problem for law enforcement if it
had to prove every time that the 'leafy substance' confiscated was
pot, and not legally grown industrial hemp.
"But the way Canada and other nations do it is to test the plants on
the farm. The bill we're proposing would allow hemp to be grown only
by licensed farmers using certified seed. State and federal officials
could go to the farm and test at any time. It works in Europe, in
Australia and New Zealand, and throughout Asia where industrial hemp
is grown."
Albert Lewis, owner of Descanso-based Hempy's, makes pants, shirts,
backpacks, wallets and hats from hemp-based textiles he imports from
China and Romania.
He said industrial hemp grown domestically would significantly lower
his costs - and the price of his products - while providing a viable,
environmentally friendly industry and American jobs.
"The DEA's decision to drop its ban is an important symbolic victory,"
Lewis said. "The Administration talks about freedom, opportunity,
ingenuity and free enterprise. Here's an industry that fits all those
categories, and yet there was a strong effort to stamp it out.
"Dropping the ban is a victory for freedom, the American spirit and
American values."
David Bronner and other advocates of consumable hemp products note
that hemp oil is an excellent alternative source of omega-3s - the
essential fatty acids found in fish oils - for those concerned about
mercury and other toxins in fish.
Adding omega-3s to the diet "seems to lower the risk of heart attacks
because omega-3 fatty acids reduce the clotting tendency of the blood
and improve cholesterol profiles," according to Dr. Andrew Weil, the
natural-foods booster and best-selling author.
"They also have a natural anti-inflammatory effect that makes them
useful for people with arthritis and autoimmune disorders."
Eyeing a bottle of hemp oil at the Ocean Beach People's Market, Jan
Hall said she learned about the benefits of hemp from her
granddaughter, Camille Berry, a freshman majoring in biochemistry at
UCSD.
"She's kind of a little hippie, like we all used to be in the '60s,"
Hall said, smiling. "She's told me about all sorts of uses for hemp -
everything from powering a diesel engine to moisturizing creams - and
she has caused me to think it is a really good substance.
"It was banned for some sort of connection to the drug culture. It
seems to me that's kind of a shame."
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