Jamaica Gleaner

Medical ganja could be worth J$16b by 2022

- Leon Jackson/Gleaner Writer

THE EMERGING medical ganja industry will become one of Jamaica’s fastestgro­wing industries and could be worth as much as J$16 billion in the next three to four years, the agricultur­e minister has said.

Speaking at Wednesday’s groundbrea­king of Organic Growth Holdings Incorporat­ed’s (OGH) Medicinal Hemp Farm at Swanwick in Trelawny, Audley Shaw called for local interests to transition into the production of cannabidio­l (CBD), a marijuana-based chemical, thus replacing imports.

OGH is investing US$4 million in the project, which is sited on sugar lands that were once owned by Long Pond Estates, which is now managed by the Sugar Company of Jamaica.

According to Shaw, OGH is part of the Government’s diversific­ation programme and expressed confidence that it would fall within the plans to provide sustainabl­e employment for the Jamaican people.

“Their product has a huge internatio­nal market. It will be environmen­tally friendly because it will require little to no pesticide,” Shaw said.

The minister was upbeat that the recent passage of the United States SAFE Banking Act will clear up concerns about the funds generated from the industry. Correspond­ent banking red flags surroundin­g the marijuana industry have caused local financial institutio­ns to shy away from transactin­g business with medicinal ganja licensees for fear of hefty fines.

But Shaw believes that tourism would benefit from interest from cruise ship passengers who would purchase CBD from farms and take it back to their homelands.

Shaw said that the Cannabis Licensing Authority would be working closely with stakeholde­rs to ensure that small farmers are included in the mix.

Four thousand of the 13,000 acres of idle sugar lands will be made available to small farmers for medicinal marijuana cultivatio­n, he said.

“The Government is also looking for export crops to replace the earnings lost from sugar cane. We are not only looking for a market here in Jamaica, but internatio­nally,” added Shaw.

 ?? PHOTO BY LEON JACKSON ?? Agricultur­e Minister Audley Shaw (second right) participat­es in the groundbrea­king for Organic Growth Holdings Incorporat­ed’s (OGH) medicinal hemp farm at Swanwick in Trelawny. From left are: Mitchel Yeckes, managing director of OGH; Robert Weinstein, co-founder and president of OGH; and Shawn Rogers, vicepresid­ent, OGH.
PHOTO BY LEON JACKSON Agricultur­e Minister Audley Shaw (second right) participat­es in the groundbrea­king for Organic Growth Holdings Incorporat­ed’s (OGH) medicinal hemp farm at Swanwick in Trelawny. From left are: Mitchel Yeckes, managing director of OGH; Robert Weinstein, co-founder and president of OGH; and Shawn Rogers, vicepresid­ent, OGH.

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