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News (Media Awareness Project) - US HI: Hawaii Begins Hemp Experiment
Title:US HI: Hawaii Begins Hemp Experiment
Published On:1999-12-15
Source:New York Times (NY)
Fetched On:2008-09-05 13:11:07
HAWAII BEGINS HEMP EXPERIMENT

WAHIAWA, Hawaii (AP) -- Surrounded by a 12-foot-high fence and
infrared surveillance, a university scientist scattered the first
seeds in an experiment that will test the viability of industrial hemp
as an agricultural resource for the state.

``Pineapple and sugar, the double roof of our economy for generations,
have now grown old,'' House Speaker Calvin Say, an Oahu Democrat, said
at Tuesday's planting on a quarter-acre plot in central Oahu.
``Perhaps in time, we can lead the way in industrial hemp technology
in the same way our technological ability in sugar and pineapple were
unsurpassed anywhere on this Earth.'' Because hemp belongs to the same
family as marijuana, it has been illegal to grow in the United States
since World War II. While some states have moved to allow hemp
growing, Hawaii is among the first to get a test project going. Hemp
stalk fibers can be used to make clothing, shoes, building materials,
strong cords and ropes, a substitute for fiberglass, paper ``and the
list goes on,'' University of Hawaii plant geneticist David West said.
Hemp seed oil contains essential fatty acids, protein and other vital
elements, and serves as a base for skin and hair care products, said
West, who will oversee the research.

Hemp production in the United States ended in 1958 and the National
Seed Storage Laboratory, charged with preserving important genetic
resources, allowed all the seeds to die, West said.

The research project -- which received $200,000 from Alterna, a hair
care company that uses hemp seeds in products -- will attempt to
develop the most productive hemp plant for Hawaii's climate, West
said. The project also involves testing various varieties of hemp for
their levels of THC -- the hallucinogenic found in marijuana.

The Drug Enforcement Administration and the White House's Office of
National Drug Control Policy previously held that permitting hemp
farming would send the wrong signal to young people and would allow
marijuana farmers to hide their crops with industrial hemp plants.

The DEA, which outlined the security measures needed to plant what
federal and state law still defines as illegal marijuana, is no longer
blocking the project, said state Rep. Cynthia Thielen, an Oahu
Republican, who sponsored the bill creating the university research
project.
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