-Caveat Lector-

Farmers look forward to hemp legalization

Copyright © 2001 Nando Media
Copyright © 2001 Christian Science Monitor Service

By CRAIG SAVOYE, Christian Science Monitor

GODFREY, Ill. (February 13, 2001 1:20 p.m. EST
http://www.nandotimes.com) - Steve Kohller looks out over the winter
stubble on his 1,000-acre farm on the Illinois prairie. Several years of
poverty prices for corn and soybeans have him dreaming of a new crop,
one that would grow as tall as 14 feet and, he says, might someday rival
soybeans in terms of cultivated acres throughout the Midwest.

"It's not a savior," he says, wearing only a thin denim jacket against the
bitter February cold. "But it may be the answer we've been looking for."

The crop he's talking about is hemp, whose close ties to marijuana have
long drawn a stern gaze from authorities. But in farm country, where
something close to a depression reigns, the struggle to legitimize industrial
hemp is serious business.

Some 27 states have either passed laws favoring hemp or are considering
such legislation, according to the North American Industrial Hemp Council
(NAIHC). Hemp production is illegal by federal statute, so states generally
call on Washington to alter its policy or set up research plots, which are
required to be fenced and guarded.

Here in Illinois, legislation that would allow hemp research at the University
of Illinois has passed both the state House and Senate and is currently
sitting on the governor's desk, awaiting action.

"You aren't going to solve the corn-, soybean-, and wheat-price problems
so long as we're producing far beyond our needs and the needs of the
world," says Bud Sholts, chairman of NAIHC. "What this country deeply
needs - in terms of agricultural development and price stabilization - is an
alternative crop of significant acreage that works well in the rotation, which
industrial hemp does."

Hemp proponents call it a miracle crop. Its fiber can be blended together to
create a Fiberglas-like material lighter and stronger than steel, which can
be used to make a variety of products, including cars. Hemp can also be
used in textiles, building materials, carpeting, even circuit boards.

As a replacement for petroleum-based products, hemp would lessen
dependence on foreign oil and is a renewable resource. It is also
biodegradable. Hemp car bodies could be shredded and dumped in
landfills. More than 30 countries have legalized hemp growing, including
Germany, Canada, England, Australia, and France.

But in this country, hemp can't shake its shady reputation. Although both
sides in the debate acknowledge it's impossible for someone to get high
on hemp even if he or she smokes a boatload of it, suspicion lingers.

Drug Enforcement Agency spokeswoman Rogene Waite said a 1998
statement on industrial hemp that equates it with marijuana still represents
the agency's policy on the matter, but added the DEA is "currently in the
process of reviewing some of the security and other issues surrounding the
regulation of industrial hemp."

Robert Weiner, a spokesman for the White House drug policy office, cites
a litany of complaints about hemp. "From a plane, it's very difficult to
distinguish between marijuana and hemp, so the enforcement side of this
would be extraordinarily difficult."

But Paul Mahlberg, a professor of cell biology at Indiana University in
Bloomington, says law enforcement in Europe has no trouble telling the two
apart. He says hemp grows eight to 14 feet high, is unbranched, and is
planted a few inches apart, like a cornfield. Marijuana plants are typically
three to four feet high, branch out like bushes, and need to be planted four
feet apart.

Moreover, Mahlberg maintains that planting the two species together would
be ill-conceived: When hemp cross-pollinates with marijuana, it cuts the
drug's potency in half, making it useless for illicit purposes.

But White House officials also question hemp's value to farmers. "Hemp is
not necessarily economically viable," says Weiner, citing an Agriculture
Department report that says U.S. markets for hemp products in 1999 could
have been produced on less than 5,000 acres of land.

Jeff Gain, former chair of the USDA's Alternative Agriculture Research and
Commercialization Corp., scoffs at the comment.

"Of course, there's no market if they won't let us grow the stuff," he says.
"We've told the DEA and the others: Go to Detroit and talk to them, and
they'll tell you how important they believe these kinds of fibers are to the
future of the automobile industry. It's no secret."

Hemp proponents contend that widespread public misunderstanding about
hemp has created an atmosphere in Washington in which potential
supporters are silenced out of fear they'll be labeled "soft on drugs," a
political kiss of death. Gain says the same is true of corporations that
would benefit from hemp products.

But things may be changing. Kohller and 37 other farmers here in Illinois
have pooled their resources and become minor investors in a hemp-
processing plant in Canada, to learn about manufacturing techniques. Their
ultimate goal is to build a plant locally, at a cost of as much as $5 million, as
soon as hemp is legal again in the United States.

And some say that day may not be far off. Gain says sources tell him the
draft DEA regulations now circulating in Washington are sympathetic to
hemp growers. "I'm very optimistic that some time in the next year or so
hemp will be legalized on the federal level," he says. "I truly believe that this
crop will rival the soybean industry in about 15 to 20 years."


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