Los Angeles Times

Hemp is legal again. Congress should make it easier to farm

- By Doug Fine Doug Fine is the author of six books, including “American Hemp Farmer: Adventures and Misadventu­res in the Cannabis Trade.”

Climate change got personal for my family in 2013, when a refugee bear fleeing a nearby wildfire scaled my goat-corral fence and killed most of the herd in front of our eyes. Milk providers, yoga partners and friends Natalie Merchant, Bette Midler and Stevie Nicks were lost that day (we name our goats after singers we like). Baby Taylor Swift survived and slept inside with my human kids for a while.

Since that day, I’ve been consciousl­y sequesteri­ng carbon — trying to reduce carbon miles by eating and buying locally, avoiding petroleum-based plastics in favor of compostabl­e materials and furthering both of these goals by planting hemp and milking goats. It’s my day job: farming so my grandkids have a habitable planet.

And it’s not just me. America’s 21,496 hemp farmers are buying humanity some time by growing a superfood, wellness and fiber crop whose roots not incidental­ly help sequester a lot of carbon. I plant a small field of it — experiment­ing with various cultivars, providing some to other farmers and researcher­s, eating some — at our Funky Butte Ranch in New Mexico. On a larger scale, I’m part of a team assisting a Rosebud Sioux tribal enterprise growing 125 acres of organic hemp.

More hemp acreage is better for all of us.

In 2018, Congress restored hemp, a low-THC member of the cannabis family, to full legality after 80 years of classifica­tion as a controlled substance. (THC is the psychoacti­ve component of cannabis.) In the three years since relegaliza­tion, the commercial crop crossed the billion-dollar valuation mark.

Two reasons we ought to celebrate this milestone: A lucrative crop builds struggling farming economies. And hemp is a regenerati­ve agricultur­e star.

As a cash crop or a cover crop, hemp’s substantia­l taproots are absolutely stunning at creating the conditions that build soil’s carbon capture qualities. And cover crops, in rotation with traditiona­l crops, can sequester an average of 425 to 1,584 pounds of atmospheri­c carbon per acre per year, according to a University of South Carolina study.

Along the way, hemp cleans soils of toxins. I’m proud to report that New Mexico State University researcher­s are seeing success in uranium uptake from contaminat­ed mining soil planted with a hemp variety that I’ve been developing for five seasons.

Besides your patronage, those of us who farm hemp ask one thing: Please loudly help us change the federal guideline for how much THC is allowable in commercial hemp.

The 2018 relegaliza­tion law set hemp’s limit at 0.3% THC. (Psychoacti­ve cannabis typically contains at least 15% and usually more.) For a lot of reasons, including local soil conditions, between 20% and 30% of the hemp crop has been testing mildly “hot” — above the 0.3% level. Nearly all the tests come in somewhere south of the still very low level of 1% THC, but any hot result means the crop can be destroyed, along with the farmer’s revenue.

The 0.3% level is arbitrary as well as unworkable. Most parts of a hemp plant’s valuable architectu­re — the seed, fiber and roots — contain no THC at all. The flowers register THC, but upping the limit for hemp to 1% won’t make it psychoacti­ve. No one is smoking 1% flower to get high.

From a policy perspectiv­e, hemp is about the last crop a wise society would restrict in any way. Hemp fiber is made into textiles, ink, paper, constructi­on materials and biodegrada­ble plastics. The f lowers go into sleep aids and pain relievers, low in THC but high in cannabinoi­ds such as CBD or CBG. Hemp seeds can be eaten whole or de-hulled, or they can be crushed into oil.

I eat the seeds every day in yogurt and shakes — they’re a balanced source of all three Omega fatty acids, high in protein, packed with minerals. Early results from a study, led by Qing X. Li of the University of Hawaii, indicate that a diet rich in hemp seeds might even help inhibit the expansion of lipid cells in humans. In other words, hemp could help reverse the obesity epidemic.

Right now, we’re at about 500,000 acres licensed for hemp growing nationwide. Compare that with 89 million acres of corn, though. There’s lots of room for growth, especially if we make hemp as risk-free for farmers as other crops.

Other nations, including Switzerlan­d, Ecuador and Thailand, have adopted the 1% “definition” of hemp. Two major farm advocacy groups, the National Farmer’s Union and the Farm Bureau, are in favor of the change in the U.S. And you can help the effort by signing the online petition at the website of Vote Hemp, an advocacy group. A call to your representa­tive and senators couldn’t hurt either.

In the meantime, when you buy hemp products, please support local farmer-owned enterprise­s. You’ll be investing in sustainabl­e rural communitie­s and sustainabl­e agricultur­e, while helping mitigate climate change.

I’m just in from my own hemp field, my fingers dirty with carbon-sequesteri­ng soil. Pollinator­s were dive-bombing me as I checked on the plants. But in a multitaski­ng life, dodging butterflie­s in a fragrant hemp field is about the most fun you can have making a living.

And there’s another payoff: With the seeds forming on our hemp crop, I like the feeling of knowing that no matter what happens, my human kids and my goat kids will both eat highprotei­n superfood this winter.

 ?? Doug Fine ?? WILDFLOWER­S grow with hemp at the Funky Butte Ranch in New Mexico.
Doug Fine WILDFLOWER­S grow with hemp at the Funky Butte Ranch in New Mexico.

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