The Phnom Penh Post

Prospect for a budding industry

- Kali Kotoski and Cheng Sokhorng

WITH Cambodia’s traditiona­l cash crops struggling to compete in global supply chains, the Kingdom could carve out a lucrative niche in commercial cannabis harvesting and exports – provided it acts fast to take advantage of the falling legal barriers, a Cambodia-based American innovator has argued.

Jim Plamondon, a former technical evangelist for Microsoft, said cannabis, the flowering plant that produces marijuana, was a potential goldmine for the Kingdom’s agricultur­al sector, which employs two-thirds of the country’s workforce.

He said US elections earlier this month were a tipping point, with more than half of the 50 US states having now legalised marijuana for medical use, such as treatment of glaucoma, and seven states legalising it for recreation­al use.

Cannabis legislatio­n by the US federal government is now widely seen as inevitable, he said, which would remove the main barrier to internatio­nal legislatio­n and trade. And if the US allows marijuana imports, first movers in the market stand to reap billions.

“The key point is that after the November elections in the US, [full legalisati­on] is inevitable,” Plamondon said yesterday, adding that if the Kingdom acted now, it could build a world-class cannabis supply chain for export in about five years.

While on paper, Cambodian law still classifies marijuana cultivatio­n as illegal, the government has historical­ly allowed small-scale farmers to grow the plant for personal consumptio­n.

Even if Cambodians fail to see the economic potential of legalising cannabis, other countries certainly will, Plamondon said.

China, where cannabis is still illegal, has already registered 600 cannabisre­lated patents with the World Intellec- tual Property Office (WIPO) in preparatio­n of a booming global trade.

Plamondon believes that unless China lifts its ban on cannabis, Chinese firms will clamour to find an offshore country willing to allow them to conduct research and developmen­t on cannabis and its products.

“These firms desperatel­y need to do research and developmen­t and market-testing environmen­t in which their cannabis-related activities are legal,” he said. “Same with the big global tobacco companies that are moving into cannabis.”

While he does not expect that the Beijing government would support Cambodia’s legalisati­on of marijuana publically, “behind the scenes, however, legalisati­on in Cambodia gives Chinese firms an optimal path to profitable commercial­isation in the West”.

This would result in a flood of for- eign direct investment over the next two to seven years, he predicted.

“Declaring cannabis to be legal in Cambodia requires no investment by Cambodia. The investment is made by foreign direct investors,” he said. “There’s nothing but upside for Cambodia. It’s a net gain from day one.”

A report earlier this year issued by US-based New Frontier and ArcView Market Research predicted that the US cannabis market would reach $7.1 billion in 2016 driven by recreation­al sales. Forbes described it in 2015 as the “best start-up opportunit­y” as the US began liberalisi­ng its drug policies.

John Muir, a consultant for Cambodian rice exporter Soma Group and an Australian “hemp” economist, said that its commercial cultivatio­n would also help to diversify crops.

“Cambodia and the region have been far too dependent on monocul- ture rice farming,” he said. “The best practice is to diversify crops and the cannabis market has a huge potential as it can be planted year-round.”

Canada, which legalised cannabisde­rived hemp in 1998, is one country already benefittin­g from falling US legal barriers.

According to Muir, the hemp industry, which is used from everything from manufactur­ing rope to clothing and vegan food ingredient­s, was a $10 billion industry for Canadian exporters to the US over the last decade.

“Now with laws in the US changing, the market is unlimited,” he added.

Whereas Cambodia had little control over the falling prices for traditiona­l agricultur­al crops, if properly spearheade­d the Kingdom could jump ahead of global competitio­n. But the window is closing.

Muir noted that countries like Uru- guay, which has slowly rolled out a state-owned cannabis initiative effective this month, was poised to tap into the US market.

“It is not just about marijuana, it is about creating a vibrant hemp industry that increases farmer’s outputs and margins,” he said.

A long-time European agricultur­al expert working for an internatio­nal developmen­tal agency in Cambodia, who declined to be named, welcomed the prospect of cannabis farming.

“When you look at what is going on in the Cambodian rice industry, it doesn’t do very well because of bad supply chains,” the source said.

Noting that highland areas of the Cardamom Mountains and the provinces of Mondulkiri and Ratanakkir­i were ideal for cannabis farming, the source said if Cambodia ever adopted industrial-scale harvesting, it would need to invest in large-scale export capabiliti­es, processing standards and ideally form an industry body to focus on competitio­n.

Khan Samban, director of the industrial crops department at the Ministry of Agricultur­e, said that while cannabis was still illegal, with proper motivation the government could consider lifting the ban.

“It is an easy crop for planting and can grow in many areas,” he said. “If it gives us a big potential market in a new industry, and if countries like the US or the European Union negotiate deals with Cambodia, I think the government would consider amending the law for special cases.”

Even if the US legalises marijuana imports, the lack of direct shipping routes from Cambodia could mean deliveries would have to pass through countries that currently prohibit its trade or transport. Plamondon, however, played down the concern.

“Because a single container of legal cannabis would be worth tens of millions of dollars, direct-to-US air cargo would be entirely cost-effective, bypassing all such obstacles,” he said.

 ?? ANGERER/GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP DREW ?? Cannabis plants grow in the ‘vegetation room’ at a Johnstown’s medical marijuana cultivatio­n facility this year in New York.
ANGERER/GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP DREW Cannabis plants grow in the ‘vegetation room’ at a Johnstown’s medical marijuana cultivatio­n facility this year in New York.
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