Dayton Daily News

Japan tough on cannabis as other nations loosen up

- Ben Dooley and Hikari Hida

From an early age, Japanese society had conditione­d Takayuki Miyabe to fear marijuana. But that was before his infant daughter was diagnosed with a rare form of epilepsy.

Desperatel­y scouring the internet for a cure, he came upon an unexpected savior: a derivative of cannabis called CBD. During a business trip to California, he bought a tiny amber bottle of the elixir, hoping for a miracle.

Miyabe wasn’t disappoint­ed. Weeks after his daughter began her treatments, her seizures stopped. “My thinking on marijuana did a 180,” he said.

Now he and his wife are developing their own line of CBD oil, joining the growing ranks of Japanese entreprene­urs eager to sell the product to consumers long taught to shun anything related to cannabis.

It won’t be easy. As most other major economies liberalize their laws on marijuana amid growing evidence of its medical benefits, Japan has doubled down on its hardline position toward the drug, ramping up arrests and increasing efforts to battle the influx of marijuana-friendly informatio­n from abroad with public awareness campaigns and tougher laws.

But proponents in Japan hope that CBD — which has some proven medical benefits but none of marijuana’s intoxicati­ng effects — can become a gateway to the so-called gateway drug.

The strategy is inspired by the United States, where news reports about CBD’s efficacy in treating certain types of pediatric epilepsy helped to change people’s minds about cannabis in general and led to widespread legal changes, said Naoko Miki, a co-founder of Green Zone Japan, a nonprofit campaignin­g for the legalizati­on of marijuana.

CBD is legal in Japan, thanks to a regulatory loophole, and its purported properties — ranging from suppressin­g inflammati­on to encouragin­g relaxation and sleep — make it an attractive product. Analysts estimate that annual demand for the supplement in Japan could grow to $800 million by 2024.

“With CBD, a lot of new people who have never been interested in either medical or recreation­al cannabis are entering the market. It’s like a new door opened,” Miki said.

For entreprene­urs hoping to cash in on the “green rush” sparked by the loosening of marijuana laws in North America and Europe, Japan is a beguiling market. The world’s third-largest economy and grayest society, the country offers an ideal demographi­c: health-conscious, aging consumers with abundant disposable income and a bottomless appetite for supplement­s that promise to balm their ills.

But Japan also has some of the most restrictiv­e cannabis laws in East Asia, a region known for its intoleranc­e of drugs.

None of the countries there are close to allowing recreation­al marijuana. But Taiwan and South Korea have both legalized medical marijuana amid mounting evidence of its efficacy. And China is the world’s largest producer of industrial hemp and related products. (CBD can be made, but not used, there.)

Japan’s censorious attitude toward cannabis is relatively recent, said Junichi Takayasu, who runs a museum on the subject in Tochigi prefecture, north of Tokyo. There is no evidence that the plant was used in the past to get high, but hemp long figured in Japanese religious rituals, where it was valued as a symbol of purity. And it was a vital industrial crop for the resourcepo­or country, used to make fabric and rope through the end of World War II.

Occupying American forces encouraged legislatio­n effectivel­y banning cultivatio­n of the plant as well as the possession or use of its leaves or flowers, as well as anything made from them.

Today, only about 20 farmers are licensed to produce the crop, mostly for shrines, where it is burned in purificati­on rituals or used to make ceremonial knots.

Most Japanese people, unaware of the plant’s long history in Japan, have absorbed the government line on it, Takayasu said.

 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Takayuki Miyabe holds his daughter Karen, whose seizures from a rare form of epilepsy are treated with CBD oil, in Kobe, Japan, Sept. 25.
THE NEW YORK TIMES Takayuki Miyabe holds his daughter Karen, whose seizures from a rare form of epilepsy are treated with CBD oil, in Kobe, Japan, Sept. 25.

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