The Denver Post

Italy’s “cannabis light” creates some buzz

- By Alessia Melchiorre and Colleen Barry

ROME» It’s been called the Italian “green gold rush.” Mild, barely-there marijuana dubbed “cannabis light” has put Italy on the internatio­nal weed map, producing hundreds of stores that sell pot by the pouch and attention from investors banking the legalizati­on of stronger stuff will follow.

The retail industry around cannabis light — weed so non-buzzy, it’s essentiall­y the decaf coffee of marijuana — surfaced as an unintended byproduct of a law meant to restore Italy as a top producer of industrial hemp. Now, storefront­s that peddle chemically ineffectiv­e hemp flowers in varieties such as “Chill Haus” and “Black Buddha” are getting blowback that some Italians fear will nip business in the bud.

Italy’s highest court clouded the climate four weeks ago by ruling it was illegal to market hemp-derived products that weren’t “in practice devoid” of the power to provide a perceptibl­e high. Sporadic testing and customer reviews suggested cannabis light outlets sold weed that weak. The law-and-order interior minister nonetheles­s declared war on the shops with neon leaf logos last month, vowing to close them “street by street, shop by shop” nationwide.

“It is neither possible nor acceptable that in Italy there are 1,000 shops where there are drugs legally, in broad daylight. This is disgusting,” said Matteo Salvini, who made keeping migrants out of Italy a primary focus after taking office a year ago.

Some business owners are ready to fight back. The owner of Green Planet in the southern city of Caserta chained himself to the fence around his locked shop this month after a raid in which police seized 16 grams of cannabis light. Gioel Magini, the owner of a Cannabis Amsterdam Store franchise in Sanremo, proposed a class-action lawsuit to keep the shops open and their owners from losing money.

“I closed a pizzeria to open this store. Now, they want us to go bankrupt,” Magini told Italian news agency ANSA. “It’s as if to fight alcoholism, the sale of nonalcohol­ic beer is banned.”

The commotion reflects the lag in Europe’s pro-marijuana movement compared with the recreation­al-use frontiers of North America. The coffee shops in Amsterdam where tourists have gone since the late 1970s to purchase pot in public never took off outside the Netherland­s. While more than 30 European countries have laws allowing medical marijuana in some form, patient advocates complain of high prices and inadequate supplies.

Enter “la cannabis light,” the catchy name Italians have for cannabis sativa plant derivative­s with low levels of THC, the psychoacti­ve compound in marijuana that causes a high. Hemp and marijuana are the same plant, but scientists classify dry plants with no more than 0.3 percent THC as hemp. In the 28-country European Union — of which Italy is a member — the cutoff is 0.2 percent. A December 2016 Italian law, however, set a domestic ceiling three times higher than that to give hemp farmers leeway for natural variations resulting from cultivatio­n, according to Stefano Masini, a spokesman for Italy’s Coldiretti agricultur­e lobby.

Although 0.6 percent is just over the THC concentrat­ion required for hemp to become marijuana in a botanist’s book, Italian regulators assumed it was too low to have a mind-altering effect and its related consumer appeal. Entreprene­urs in a country with a lackluster economy nonetheles­s saw an opportunit­y.

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