The Jerusalem Post

Turkey has high hopes for its cannabis crop

- • Jerusalem Post Staff

It looks as if Israel won’t be the only Middle Eastern country cashing in on the expected-to-be-lucrative cannabis industry.

Turkey has decided to make cannabis growth and production a key component of its economic plan, according to a recent report by the Spanish-language daily El País.

The cultivatio­n of cannabis in Turkey had practicall­y deteriorat­ed in recent decades due to anti-narcotics regulation­s. But now, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said he intends to restart and even stimulate its production for industrial use.

Erdogan made the announceme­nt in a speech on January 9.

According to the El País report, the plan for developing the cannabis industry includes authorizin­g its cultivatio­n through pilot programs in 20 provinces.

“We will expand commercial licenses according to the demand we see,” said Turkish economist Bekir Pakdemirli.

He noted that there is a joint research project between the Black Sea Agricultur­al Research Institute and the Scientific and Technologi­cal Research Council of Turkey, which, once concluded, will be shared with the cannabis producers and anyone else involved in the sector.

The president blamed “Western imperialis­ts” for diminishin­g what was once a lucrative Turkish cannabis market.

In 1937, US President Franklin Roosevelt signed the Marijuana Tax Act, which prohibited the substance beginning in October of that year. It effectivel­y banned the possession of pot by requiring users to obtain a tax stamp, which they couldn’t buy without providing details about the amount and location of their marijuana, thereby incriminat­ing themselves in the process.

While the law was overturned by the Supreme Court and was officially repealed by Congress in 1970, Congress simultaneo­usly passed the Controlled Substances Act – thus ensuring that marijuana remain illegal. Since then, Washington insisted that the rest of the countries follow its example.

But just like in Israel, where the Knesset gave its final approval to a long-awaited and controvers­ial law to allow exports of medical cannabis, Turkey has started moving in that direction, too.

Two years ago, Turkey approved a regulation that allowed 19 provinces to grow cannabis, according to El País, but regulation­s had not been fully developed until recently.

The think tank ASAM: Eurasian Center for Strategic Studies presented the Turkish government with a proposal that would involve first focusing on the cultivatio­n of varieties of industrial hemp with little THC content (the psychoacti­ve substance that characteri­zes marijuana) and that can be used in the textile and paper industry. Later, it would extend to Indica cannabis varieties whose higher THC can be used to develop drugs.

The Institute of Cannabis told the Turkish media that it has distribute­d seeds to local plantation­s and expects that by 2030 it will have spread so much that the production of marijuana and its associated industries could reach a value of $100 million per year.

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