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Congress Wake Up & Let Farmers Grow Industrial Hemp!

December 11, 2007 Drug Policy, Environment 10 Comments

One of the most green products in the world, able to be fabricated into many diverse products, is banned in only one industrial nation — the United States. Sure, we can import product made from Hemp such as all manner of clothing, bedding, ropes, paper, and so on, but our farmers cannot grow this product as the feds fear the farmers or others might grow its hallucinogenic cousin, pot.

Both industrial hemp and pot are members of the cannabis family, although the latter has a mind-altering impact when injested that the former does not. Under this logic we need to ban gardeners from planning the lovely poppy plant and stop the sale of poppy-seed bagels at St. Louis Bread Co because some folks use a cousin of those to manufacture heroin. Unlike a pretty flower or a damn fine bagel variety, industrial hemp has so many uses in society. Similarly, pot and heroin are not even in the same league.

I’ve smoked pot all of one time — and yes I inhaled (see post). It still smells funny to me. So while I have little desire to run out and buy pot I think we need to let up. I say we just legalize it — that will certainly remove allure to do something illegal. It will also remove the stigma of getting caught as well as pull the rug out from under the street value. But, this post is not about pot, it is about industrial hemp.

More so than a quick toke I want to buy clothing made from hemp. It’s available, but boy is it pricey. How does $40 for a t-shirt sound? Some of it is borderline reasonable but a far cry from being affordable. If the US were growing industrial hemp the raw materials would be much more affordable — manufacturers could continue to pay their workers decent wages and still sell at a profit, even when the retail price drops. Basic supply and demand at work. The problem is the demand is there but the feds have forced a market shortage on the supply side.

Recently farmers in North Dakota sued the federal government for the right to grow industrial hemp.  The judge, however, said they need to take it up with congress.  From a Reuters story:

“Obviously we are disappointed with the decision,” says Eric Steenstra, President of Vote Hemp, a grassroots group working to bring industrial hemp farming back to the U.S. “The Court’s decision shows it understands that the established and growing market for industrial hemp would be beneficial for North Dakota farmers to supply. Yet the decision overlooks Congress’s original intent – and the fact that farmers continued to grow hemp in the U.S.for twenty years after marijuana was banned. If the plaintiffs decide to appeal the case, we would wholeheartedly support that effort. We are not giving up and will take this decision to Washington, DC to prompt action by Congress on HR 1009, the Industrial Hemp Farming Act of 2007, which would clarify a state’s right to grow the crop,” adds Steenstra.

If you share my concerns, contact your U.S. Representative, and your U.S. Senators, to ask them to support industrial hemp farming.  All those candidates for President and all the state-level folks need to be asked about positions on industrial hemp as well.  It is about time we once again grew one of the products that helped get this country through WWII.

 

Currently there are "10 comments" on this Article:

  1. Chris says:

    One less item (a farmed item no less) that needs to be imported.

     
  2. william says:

    I agree with your thoughts on industrial hemp…but why stop there.

    Marijuana is the country’s biggest cash crop….valued more than corn and wheat COMBINED. If we leaglize it and tax it like alcohol and tabacco, think of all the revenue we could put towards solving REAL problems like education and energy independence. After all, the FDA has stated pot is less addictive than both tabacco and alcohol.

    I know poeple don’t want to start legalizing drugs, but think of all the good possible by legalizing a drug that is more or less harmless.

     
  3. bs says:

    My favorite memento from the one Grateful Dead show I attended is a dollar bill with a stamped speech balloon for George Washington that says “I grew hemp.” Classic.

    Hemp could also be a low-impact feedstock for cellulosic ethanol once the technology is commercially viable in a few years, too.

     
  4. Justmyview says:

    Eh dude…… like right-on, …ya-know.

     
  5. dude says:

    I suspect pot is kept illegal by the industry that relies on being reimbersed for billable hours for their services because it’s illegal like police, lawyers, prison guards, social workers, parole officers… I’m thinking THC can be regulated and it would be a financial boost to the American farmer. Attacking supply hasn’t curbed demand and now people south of the border have consilated this and the industry of human smuggling together. BTW I’ve never smoked up.

     
  6. Jim Zavist says:

    Too bad industrial hemp isn’t like switchgrass or corn (or maybe it is) – if it could be used to produce ethanol, it would be(come) a lot more PC . . .

    [SLP — Hemp is a much better base for ethanol than corn, it grows quickly and burns cleaner.]

     
  7. typo says:

    BS

    Just one Dead Show? Sucks to be you!

     
  8. Jim Zavist says:

    But what is its sugar/starch content? While you need to burn something to boil the mash (to make alcohol), you want to start with a high starch, high sugar mixture to distill – that’s why they use sugar cane in S. America.

     
  9. Jim Zavist says:

    answered my own question – from http://mojo.calyx.net/~olsen/HEMP/IHA/iha01213.html – “Essentially, all agricultural crops do the same thing: they intercept light with their canopy and, in the leaves, sugars are formed as a result of photosynthesis. Most of the sugars move out of the leaves to other parts of the plant and are transformed into other organic substances, e.g., cellulose and lignin in the stem, and starch, protein and oil in the seed.
    .
    In the most favourable growing conditions, we obtained yields of up to 15,000 kg of stem dry matter per hectare (6,070 kg per acre). Under simular conditions, other crops such as maize [corn], sugar beet or potato produced similar dry matter yields. All results indicate that as far its yield is concerned, fibre hemp is in no way exceptional.”
    .
    Bottom line, it’s an OK source for producing alcohol, but it delivers better “results” thru direct combustion 😉

     

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