Eastern Eye (UK)

Islamabad approves industrial hemp cultivatio­n

-

PAKISTAN has approved the industrial production of hemp, which could generate foreign exchange of up to $1 billion (£761 million) in the next three years, the minister for science and technology said last Wednesday (2).

A cabinet meeting chaired by prime minister Imran Khan approved a summary last Tuesday (1) to allow legal production for the first time, the minister Fawad Chaudhry told a news conference in Islamabad.

“We want that this hemp market could give us around $1 billion in the next three years,” he said, adding the global market is worth around $25 billion.

The summary says the ministry sought permission to cultivate industrial hemp after deliberati­on by the ministries of commerce, narcotics control and national health services.

Hemp seeds produce hemp oil, while the leaf is used in medicine and the stem can be turned into fibre to replace cotton in the textile industry.

Chaudhry said the compound cannabidio­l found in the hemp plant has an important role in medical science and therapies to mitigate severe and chronic pain affecting, for instance, cancer patients or those who have lost limbs.

Across the world, companies have been seeking to tap into the market for medicinal cannabis.

The minister said the cultivatio­n of hemp – a strain of the cannabis plant that contains little or no tetrahydro­cannabinol, or THC, the substance that makes people high – will only be allowed under government control and the venture should not be confused with poppy-growing.

Pakistan’s northweste­rn lawless districts have been home to the illegal cultivatio­n of poppies for opium and heroin and the production of cannabis, supplied to the local narcotics market or smuggled internatio­nally.

 ??  ?? MULTI-USE: Hemp seeds give oil, while the stem can be made into fibre for textiles
MULTI-USE: Hemp seeds give oil, while the stem can be made into fibre for textiles

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom