Bangkok Post

Bill to limit households to 10 plants

- AEKARACH SATTABURUT­H

A new bill being vetted by a House committee on cannabis and hemp will limit the number of cannabis plants which a household could grow to ten and require large-scale cannabis growers to pay a progressiv­e levy to the government which increases with the size of the operation.

A spokesman for the committee, Panthep Puapongpan, said the majority of the committee’s members agreed to cap the number of cannabis plants allowed per household to ten, in order to limit the potential for abuse in the wake of the plant’s recent decriminal­isation.

The committee agreed to cap the number of plants per household to ten to ensure households could still benefit from the private cultivatio­n of cannabis, which the government is promoting as a cash crop, he said.

At least 900,000 individual­s have already registered to grow cannabis at home with authoritie­s, according to the latest figures cited by Mr Panthep.

The bill also seeks to introduce progressiv­e levies on commercial cannabis growers.

Under the proposal, growers with less than 5 rai of land will be subject to the least levies, while those whose plots are larger will be subject to a more stringent applicatio­n process and higher levies, he said.

Those who cultivate cannabis and hemp for medical purposes will be considered as an operator of a smallsized plantation and will have to comply with the same regulation­s when the bill becomes law, he said.

In a related news, Assoc Prof Chanchai Sittipunt, dean of Faculty of Medicine at Chulalongk­orn University, revealed that three individual­s were recently admitted to King Chulalongk­orn Memorial Hospital after ingesting cannabis preparatio­ns beyond their tolerance.

They were all adults who had eaten products containing cannabis, such as cookies, without knowing exactly how much active ingredient­s were in said products, he said.

The doctor is optimistic that “overdoses” among consumers will decline as concerned authoritie­s, including the Department of Health, have launched a campaign to educate the public as to how much cannabis can be safely added to food preparatio­ns without causing adverse effects and/or harm to consumers.

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