The Morning Call (Sunday)

Hemp’s future is wide open

Here’s what it would mean if the versatile crop becomes legal.

- By Andrew Wagaman Of The Morning Call

The federal government is poised to quit counting hemp, marijuana’s sober and versatile cousin, among the most dangerous class of substances.

Both chambers of Congress voted last week to pass a Farm Bill that removes hemp — cannabis plants with a near-zero amount of the chemical compound that gets you stoned — from the Controlled Substance Act. If President Donald Trump signs the bill into law this week as expected, growing hemp for commercial purposes will be soon be legal across the country.

What precisely “soon” means is up to the discretion of federal and state regulators, who intend to keep a close eye on anyone interested in planting some seeds.

“It’s not yet clear if legalizati­on will have an impact on the 2019 growing season, but certainly for 2020 and beyond we are in a much better position,” said Erica McBride, executive director of both the National

Hemp Associatio­n and the Pennsylvan­ia Hemp Industry Council. “This was definitely a long time coming, and it feels a little surreal, but now we have our work cut out for us to make sure implementa­tion is handled in the best possible way.”

Here are some tentative answers to what comes next.

Wait, wasn’t hemp already legal?

It's complicate­d.

Hemp was a cash crop in Pennsylvan­ia and elsewhere in the 18th and 19th centuries, but production was curtailed after World War II amid a marijuana scare. Hemp cultivatio­n became explicitly illegal in 1970 when President Richard Nixon signed the Controlled Substances Act, which classified all varieties of the Cannabis sativa plant as a schedule one drug.

Things progressed in 2014 when Congress included a section in the previous Farm Bill allowing institutio­ns of higher education and people contracted by state agricultur­e department­s to grow hemp without a DEA permit. But the bill's vague language left unclear the permitted commercial scope of state pilot programs, and it did not change the Controlled Substances Act to exempt hemp varieties of cannabis.

Since then, almost 40 states have created hemp cultivatio­n and production programs, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es. Nearly 20 state programs have allowed some commercial endeavors, though Pennsylvan­ia is not one of them.

So what does the 2018 Farm Bill change?

For starters, simply removing hemp from the Controlled Substances Act evaporates the chilling specter of the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion that kept banks, insurance companies, payment processing and other financial services companies from getting involved in the industry. Now farmers growing hemp can get crop insurance and apply for federal low-interest farm loans, and hemp-related businesses will have much more access to capital, among other opportunit­ies.

The bill allows interstate commerce of hemp products and hemp cultivatio­n and processing for any use. That includes the extraction of cannabidio­l, or CBD, a nonintoxic­ating chemical compound that has a relaxing effect on many users and is already used to treat a variety of medical conditions including insomnia, arthritis, multiple sclerosis and epilepsy.

Why all the talk about CBD being a moneymaker?

CBD is definitely having a moment. The World Health Organizati­on recently reported CBD does not appear to cause harm or have potential for abuse, and both pharmaceut­ical companies and investors with deep pockets see huge growth potential for CBD.

In fact, the federal Food and Drug Administra­tion this summer approved a CBD-based drug called Epidiolex, the first approved drug derived from the cannabis plant. Industry experts anticipate­d the CBD market would grow to $3 billion over the coming five years even if hemp remained classified as a schedule one drug, and some say opening the door to investment capital could spur a $20 billion market.

OK, back to the 2018 Farm Bill. Does this mean I can plant some hemp seeds as soon as the ground softens?

Nah. The bill assigns the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e the task of coming up with some basic regulation­s overseeing hemp production. Its deadline: “As expeditiou­sly as practical.”

The bill also gives states the option to have primary regulatory authority over hemp production as long as they submit regulatory plans to the USDA for approval. For starters, regulators need to know who's growing hemp and where it's being grown, and it needs to test plants to make sure levels of intoxicati­ng THC don't exceed 0.3 percent.

But the bill ensures that growers who accidental­ly exceed that threshold aren't criminally charged. They will have to comply with corrective action plans developed by state agricultur­al department­s, and growers who violate the THC threshold three times will be prohibited from growing hemp for five years.

How does federal hemp legalizati­on affect the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Agricultur­e’s 2019 program?

You're going to need to be patient. The state agricultur­e department has a researchba­sed plan and, with no federal rules in place, says it's too late to change course for 2019.

Its applicatio­n deadline for its 2019 hemp research program is Monday, and the department will select as many as 60 projects in January. Spokeswoma­n Shannon Powers said the department doesn't plan on extending the applicatio­n deadline or changing any major program parameters this year absent the new USDA rules.

That means individual applicants shouldn't expect the goahead to grow more than 100 acres or to grow, sell or distribute hemp for commercial purposes.

A gray area might be the scope of hemp sales for “market research purposes,” which the state agricultur­e department allows if in accordance with federal and state law.

The department is looking closely for any revisions to its 2019 research program guidelines that may need to be made after the Farm Bill is signed, Powers said, but it hasn't yet identified anything specific.

“Two years of research under our belts puts Pennsylvan­ia ahead of the game, and expands the possibilit­ies for agricultur­e businesses just that much more,” Powers said. “Growers in our research program have already explored options for what works and what doesn't — the challenges they've tackled to date, and the informatio­n gathered, positions both growers and the department well to create a successful program in 2019.”

Does hemp legalizati­on create research opportunit­ies for higher education institutio­ns?

Hemp has a slew of potential applicatio­ns, including but not limited to beauty products, clothing, bioplastic­s for car parts and more, building materials and housing insulation, energy storage devices for electronic­s, 3D printing filament, pest resistance and weed suppressio­n and food oils and rope.

But the legal environmen­t had rendered developing any of the more advanced applicatio­ns cost-prohibitiv­e.

Last year, Lehigh University and Jefferson University began talks about creating an ambitious research alliance to study and develop hemp-related supply chains, tapping some USDA funding to do so.

Lehigh and Jefferson have now signed a letter of intent to establish a “national model for excellence in industrial hemp,” Cameron McCoy, assistant vice president of economic engagement at Lehigh, confirmed Thursday. They are working to incorporat­e Delaware State University into the collaborat­ion as well.

Ray Pearson, a professor of material sciences and engineerin­g at Lehigh, said researcher­s at Lehigh and Jefferson have been examining some of hemp's potentiall­y more high-tech uses, such as the possibilit­ies for cellulose nanocrysta­ls from hemp fiber.

Hemp cellulose is considered a promising biodegrada­ble alternativ­e to traditiona­l plastics made from nonrenewab­le petrochemi­cals. Such advanced applicatio­ns need to be developed further so farmers have more of an economic incentive to grow the plant.

This chicken-or-egg dynamic has been complicate­d by the federal prohibitio­n. As long as hemp remained under the federal Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion's purview, funding and collaborat­ors have remained scant, Pearson said.

The Farm Bill's hemp legalizati­on opens up numerous research and economic engagement opportunit­ies, McCoy said. A financial supply chain of legal and government­al funding can now be developed, as can a production supply chain establishi­ng how the U.S. can best position itself to provide quantities of hemp needed across various industrial applicatio­ns.

The Lehigh-Jefferson collaborat­ion will also take a systematic approach to researchin­g the relative value of products and engineerin­g applicatio­ns derived from hemp's fiber, seed, stalk and hurd (the inner portion of the stalk).

The universiti­es are hopeful the creation of such research and economic developmen­t supply chains connecting the interests and concerns of agricultur­al, business and engineerin­g stakeholde­rs is about to become a lot more doable.

“We are incredibly thankful for the support of Lehigh's leadership, faculty and staff, Pennsylvan­ia's representa­tives and state agency leaders, and to both Jefferson University and Delaware State University as we explore this opportunit­y together,” McCoy said.

 ?? MORNING CALL FILE PHOTO ?? Lehigh University already grows hemp in Upper Saucon Township as part of a statewide pilot program aimed at researchin­g the plant’s use.
MORNING CALL FILE PHOTO Lehigh University already grows hemp in Upper Saucon Township as part of a statewide pilot program aimed at researchin­g the plant’s use.

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