Industrial Hemp Movement

Industrial Hemp Movement

Rick Worthington
Rick Worthington
Industrial Hemp Movement

Farmers, who soon may be looking for crops that use less water, could switch to industrial hemp.

The hemp plant is a relative of marijuana, and the federal government recently passed laws allowing the commercial growing, interstate sale and processing of the now-legal plant.

Hemp is used to manufacture clothes, shoes and ropes, as well as biofuels, medicines and more.

Chelsea McGuire with the Farm Bureau, says hemp, unlike its hallucinogenic cousin, contains almost none of the chemical THC, which produces the high in marijuana.

"If the level of THC, which is the mind-altering chemical in marijuana, if that's higher than 0 .03, then it's not hemp, it's marijuana," she explains. "If it's lower than that, then it is hemp. So that's how you tell the difference between the two."

McGuire says hemp uses about one-third the amount of the water it takes to grow other crops, and a short cultivation cycle would allow most farms two or more crops per year.

"Even when we had that regulatory structure in place for our guys to grow it, it was still going to be really tough to get it in the state because you couldn't transport seed without quite a few regulations and quite a few structures in place," she points out. "You couldn't transport an illegal substance across state line."

McGuire says it may take a while for some people to get over the stigma of products made from hemp, but there is a ready market for its fibers and oils.

"There's no stigma to other fiber crops like cotton because we're familiar with them, we use them, we wear them every day," she states. "So, the more mainstream hemp becomes, I think the less and less that stigma becomes an issue."

Hemp growers will be licensed and regulated by state officials, who plan to test crops frequently for their THC content.x`

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