Santa Cruz Sentinel

Hong Kong’s first CBD cafe opens its doors to customers

- By Alice Fung

HONG KONG >> Cannabis may be illegal in Hong Kong, but a new cafe is offering a range of food and drinks that contain parts of the cannabis plant without breaking any local laws.

The cafe, named Found, is the city’s first to offer a range of coffees, biscuits, beer and fruit juices that contain cannabidio­l, or CBD, a substance from the cannabis plant that is said to offer therapeuti­c effects without getting users intoxicate­d.

Cannabis’s tetrahydro­cannabinol compound — commonly known as THC — is the psychoacti­ve ingredient that gives users a high. But unlike THC, CBD is typically used to help reduce stress without the high.

One Found customer, Killian Hussey, who works in finance in Hong Kong, said consuming CBD coffee is relaxing.

“The coffee is delicious, and I like the effect that the CBD has on me,” Hussey said. “Cognitivel­y and physically, it kind of helps me get through the aches and pains of a normal day.”

A bottle of cold CBD-infused coffee costs 80 Hong Kong dollars ($10) at Found, while a can of CBD beer is HK$70 ($9). The cafe, which had a soft opening this month, is expected to be fully operationa­l in October.

“Hong Kong is actually one of Asia’s most progressiv­e cannabinoi­d markets,” said Fiachra Mullen, co- owner of Altum Internatio­nal, a cannabinoi­ds supplier in Asia that operates Found. “Unlike other parts of the region — Australia, New Zealand, Singapore — it’s actually quite a progressiv­e cannabinoi­d law in Hong Kong.”

Mullen said that he hopes the cafe can help break down the stigma surroundin­g CBD products, and wants to distance CBD from cannabis and the recreation­al use of drugs.

Found can sell cannabinoi­ds in food as long as there is no THC in the products, he said.

According to the Hong Kong government’s Centre for Food and Safety, under the Dangerous Drugs Ordinance, the illicit import of cannabis or any products that contain controlled cannabinoi­ds constitute­s a criminal offense.

Although CBD is a cannabinoi­d, it is not classified as a dangerous drug under Hong Kong law.

 ?? PHOTOS BY VINCENT YU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An employee adds drops of water-soluble CBD, or cannabidio­l, an essential component of medical marijuana, into a coffee glass at the Found Cafe in Hong Kong on Sept. 13. Cannabis, also known as marijuana, in Hong Kong may be illegal, but the new Found Cafe is offering a range of food and drinks that contain parts of the cannabis plant without breaking any local laws.
PHOTOS BY VINCENT YU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An employee adds drops of water-soluble CBD, or cannabidio­l, an essential component of medical marijuana, into a coffee glass at the Found Cafe in Hong Kong on Sept. 13. Cannabis, also known as marijuana, in Hong Kong may be illegal, but the new Found Cafe is offering a range of food and drinks that contain parts of the cannabis plant without breaking any local laws.
 ??  ?? Customers sit in at tables outside the Found Cafe in Hong Kong on Sept. 13.
Customers sit in at tables outside the Found Cafe in Hong Kong on Sept. 13.
 ?? VINCENT YU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Coffee, biscuits, green tea and chocolate mooncake that contain cannabidio­l, or CBD, a substance from the cannabis plant, are displayed at the Found Cafe in Hong Kong on Sept. 13.
VINCENT YU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Coffee, biscuits, green tea and chocolate mooncake that contain cannabidio­l, or CBD, a substance from the cannabis plant, are displayed at the Found Cafe in Hong Kong on Sept. 13.

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