By Richard Rose
For U.S. hemp it’s time to get real, time for action, not platitudes. Only legal three years now, acreages harvested are falling, a third of the crops are noncompliant, bankruptcies frequent, and farmers and processors are losing interest and money fast.
We need to make the pivot from hemp for cannabinoids to hemp for the other 24,999 uses.
If USDA has $20 million just to gather data that seed vendors should rightly be gathering instead, then this project is a no-brainer. Besides, doesn’t AOSCA certification mean anything, anymore? If so, those cultivars should be compliant and productive across the country with no further expensive research needed to validate them at taxpayer expense.
Especially since those data are mostly for states hostile to traditional field hemp, with its male pollen making enemies downwind. California has long been the most hostile, read about that here, here, here, here, here, and here.
Like in California, Washington hemp was sabotaged years ago by those purportedly on our side; today it is so non-existent as to almost be an oxymoron. Oregon is all about that Type 1 and 3, so no one wants hemp pollen seeding their bud. Idaho was the last state to legalize hemp and previously wanted to ban all Cannabis, and Montana already has an entity duplicating this work.
That $20 million could have financed two seed and/or fiber processing plants, which is where the bottlenecks actually are.
Seed and fiber need to work together in the future, since where there is hempseed there is fiber, and often where there is fiber there is seed. Some fiber uses require harvesting before flowering and thus no seed, but most fiber applications do not. These projects need to allow farmers to harvest and process both in order to maximize returns. Cannabinoids are not an explicit part of this project, although it is understood trichomes (CBD and essential oil) may be harvested as a tertiary processing stream resource.
Therefore USDA should make a grant to any domestic entity for projects:
Make it easy to apply, with few hurdles. Frame it as a “Marshall Plan for Hemp.” It’s fitting as it heals generations of “regulatory bombing” of the hemp community by the federal government.
Hemp industry veteran Richard Rose is a consultant who writes and produces “The Richard Rose Report.”
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