Jamaica Gleaner

$260M GANJA STUDY

Ja eyes investment in medicinal marijuana market in Canada

- Christophe­r Serju/ Gleaner Writer

THE JAMAICAN Medical Cannabis Corporatio­n (JMMC) is investing US$2 million (J$264,000,000) into research on local ganja strains in order to ascertain with scientific accuracy their medicinal potential over the next 10 years.

Professor Errol Morrison, director general of the National Commission on Science and Technology, spoke to the enormity of the project titled ‘Identifica­tion, Isolation and Conservati­on of Local Strains of Cannabis for Medicinal Use’ during Monday’s signing ceremony.

“What you are about to witness is the dedication of our scientific community to eventually [map] the scientific identifica­tion of our strain. Not a look, touch, smell, feel (but) DNA science to underpin what it is that we have been making claims for centuries,” he said.

“We shall be using a nutraceuti­cal affirmatio­n of the claims for health benefits down the road and we shall be archiving these claims for posterity, so that we can assure, a hundred years from now, that Strain X shall be Strain X and not hybridised out or cross-fertilised in any way,” Morrison stated.

The research scientist lamented that having first identified the medicinal benefits of the cannabis sativa strain in the 1970s, which was found to lower pressure in the eye, Jamaica had lost ground since. However, this agreement between the JMCC, a Jamaican company based in Canada, and the locally based National Foundation for the Developmen­t of Science and Technology will go a far way in reversing this neglect.

The research will use advanced technical, botanical and agricultur­al methods to identify and preserve local strains of indigenous ganja.

Dianne Scott, chief executive officer of the JMCC said:

“We are focused 100 per cent on medicinal cannabis. It is our stated goal. Coming out of Jamaica [will] be the best growers of medicinal cannabis in the world. We are bringing a premium product, a product that is not available anywhere else in the world, except on this island.

“That is why we are 100 per cent committed to protecting what you have, what makes you unique, what cannot be found anywhere else; that is why we are doing the study,” said Scott.

 ?? LIONEL ROOKWOOD/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? From left: Dr Conrad Douglas, director, National Foundation for the Developmen­t of Science & Technology; Dr Andrew Wheatley, minister of science, energy and technology; Dianne Scott, CEO, JMCC; and Professor Errol Morrison at the presentati­on of a...
LIONEL ROOKWOOD/PHOTOGRAPH­ER From left: Dr Conrad Douglas, director, National Foundation for the Developmen­t of Science & Technology; Dr Andrew Wheatley, minister of science, energy and technology; Dianne Scott, CEO, JMCC; and Professor Errol Morrison at the presentati­on of a...

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