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The DEA should get out of regulating
hemp agriculture
San Francisco Bay Guardian
San Francisco, California
April 3, 2000
By Ralph Nader
INDUSTRIAL HEMP IS one of the longest
and strongest natural fibers in the plant kingdom. It is also one of the
most versatile plants, with approximately 25,000 uses - ranging from paper
to textiles to cosmetics. Once deemed an indispensable commodity in the
global market, it was replaced by a multitude of synthetic fibers by the
mid-1900s, when it fell out of favor in the United States because of its
relation to marijuana. But, while industrial hemp does belong to the same
species as marijuana, it is a different variety with a very low THC content.
Smoking hemp will definitely not give you a high, though it will give
you a headache.
In recent years industrial hemp has experienced a renaissance. Farmers
throughout the world are growing hemp in countries, such as France, that
have never banned its cultivation, and in countries, such as Canada, that
strictly regulate hemp production to guard against even the most remote
possibility of illicit marijuana production. The United States, on the
other hand, lags far behind. Due to bureaucratic red tape and overzealousness
on the part of the Drug Enforcement Agency, industrial hemp cannot be
commercially grown in the United States.
While American farmers are forbidden from commercially growing this crop,
American manufacturers are allowed to import hemp from China and other
nations and to manufacture hemp products. To address this injustice, a
coalition of conservation organizations, farmers, and businesses petitioned
the United States Drug Enforcement Agency and the United States Department
of Agriculture, asking the agencies to allow the commercial production
of hemp in the United States. The second anniversary of the submission
of this petition was on March 23. Deplorably, the second anniversary passed
with no action by the DEA or the USDA on the petition.
If the DEA and the USDA had promptly acted on the petition, American farmers
could already be producing a commercially viable crop. According to the
Institute for Local Self-Reliance, in 1999, hemp yields averaged 800 pounds
(17 to 22 bushels of grain), grossing $308 to $410 per acre. These figures
compare favorably to the $103 to $137 gross made on canola and wheat crops
per acre.
The DEA and the USDA have decided to impede the development of an industrial
hemp industry in the United States. While the U.S. Controlled Substance
Act allows the import of sterilized hemp seed, oil, grain, and other derivatives,
the DEA blocked a shipment of sterilized industrial hemp seeds at the
Canada-U.S. border in 1999. For example, U.S. Customs requested that Kenex
Ltd., the exporter, recall all of its previous shipments of industrial
hemp, totaling 17 trailer loads worth of oil, horse bedding, granola bars,
and animal feed, or face a minimum $500,000 fine. This seizure was apparently
in response to a newly instituted DEA policy that treats products containing
THC (no matter how small the amount) as an equivalent to the controlled
drug marijuana. After the involvement of the Canadian consulate in Washington,
D.C., and media scrutiny, the recall has been rescinded and shipments
resumed.
However, border seizures of various industrial hemp products continue,
making some U.S. companies wary of manufacturing hemp products. The DEA
also actively opposes and lobbies against state efforts to encourage the
commercial production of industrial hemp. According to Agro-Tech Communications,
16 states introduced pro-industrial hemp legislation in 1999, with nine
states actually passing legislation calling for research, study, or production
of industrial hemp.
Hawaii has been the most proactive, passing hemp legislation and obtaining
a DEA permit to grow an industrial hemp test crop. To satisfy the DEA's
strict standards Hawaii has erected a chain-link fence topped with razor
wire and a 24-hour infrared security system around its hemp plots - measures
which would make commercial production impractical.
These actions on the part of the United States government are ensuring
that while Canadian farmers prosper from industrial hemp, American farmers
are unlikely to see its benefits anytime soon.
Industrial hemp is not a drug. The DEA's intrusion into the realm of agriculture
is preventing American farmers from growing a crop that has the potential
to help address the global depletion of forest resources, the harmful
effects of petrochemicals, the excessive use of pesticides for fiber crops,
and the economic depression of farming communities.
Concerned
citizens should let their House members or Congress know their feelings
about this wonder crop.
On the Web: North American Industrial
Hemp Council: http://www.naihc.org
Full text of the Industrial Hemp
Petition: http://www.essential.org/rca/indhemp.html
Institute for Local Self-Reliance:
http://www.ilsr.org
San Francisco Bay Guardian (CA)
520 Hampshire, San Francisco, Ca 94110 Fax: (415) 255-8762 Contact: letters@sfbg.com
Website: http://www.sfbg.com
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