By Steve Lynn
Source: ncbr.com
Ken Stanton, a high school teacher and engineer, is using
a small
home-based grow operation in Fort Collins to begin
researching new
strains of industrial hemp. Photo by
Jonathan Castner / For BizWest
Boulder, Larimer and Weld counties account for a third of the more than
150 applications statewide to grow hemp that have been submitted to the
Colorado Department of Agriculture.
People in Boulder Valley and
Northern Colorado counties submitted 53 of the 159 applications received
by the state, according to the agriculture department. The deadline to
register was May 1.
Statewide, prospective hemp growers have
applied to grow the crop on 1,600 acres, with applicants coming from
nearly every part of the state, including the Western Slope, San Luis
Valley and southeast Colorado. The agriculture department declined to
provide acreage of individual operations to BizWest, contending that the
information was confidential.
Growing hemp became legal along
with the retail sale and possession of small amounts of marijuana after
Colorado voters passed Amendment 64 in November 2012. Producers began
registering with the state in March to grow the crop, although federal
law still bars commercial growth. The plant has lower levels of the
psychoactive component of the cannabis plant, tetrahydrocannabinol, and
can be used in textiles, biofuel, paper and other products.
The
crop could mean economic opportunity for Colorado beyond recreational
marijuana sales and the resulting pot tourism. U.S. retailers sell more
than $300 million worth of goods containing hemp, all of which is
imported because farmers were barred from growing it here, according to
the office of U.S. Rep. Earl Blumenauer, D-Ore. Federal law still
prohibits commercial growth.
In Boulder County, 12 applications
have been approved with another 11 being considered. In Larimer County,
10 applications were approved and another seven were pending. Weld
County hemp growers had nine of their applications approved and another
two were awaiting authorization.
Only two have been denied for inadequate documentation, one in Weld County and another in Boulder County.
Ken
Stanton, a high school teacher who plans to grow hemp in Fort Collins,
said he is growing the crop through his business, Amagi Agriculture, to
research what strains grow best and their applications, including paper
and oil production.
Stanton, an engineer who holds a Ph.D., said
if he can build his business, he may work on the project full time but
for now only will plant a fraction of an acre indoors. Growing the plant
outdoors would add too many variables, such as weather, light, humidity
and temperature, to his experiment.
“We don’t really have a lot
of history of the varieties we’re using in Colorado,” Stanton said. “We
just don’t know what they’re going to be used for.”
The lack of
hemp seed and legal barriers to importing it have posed challenges for
growers such as Stanton, although he says he obtained his hemp seed
legally within the state.
“Getting seed is still challenging,” he said.
Morris
Beagle, owner of Colorado Hemp Co. in Loveland, expects the hemp
industry to generate jobs and contribute to the state’s economy. He
thinks educational efforts about hemp, including events such as the
Northern Colorado Hemp Festival, have led to heightened interest in the
Boulder Valley and Northern Colorado. U.S. Rep. Jared Polis, D-Colo.,
also once held a forum on industrial hemp and its importance to the
economy in Fort Collins.
“There’s been education that’s been going on for several years,” Beagle said. “I’m glad the farmers are paying attention.”
While
marijuana decriminalization has generated some negative headlines, hemp
has remained a positive aspect of Amendment 64, he said.
“There’s nobody speaking out against hemp,” he said, “because there’s nothing to speak out against.”
Steve Lynn can be reached at slynn@bizwestmedia.com and 303-630-1968 or 970-232-3147. Follow Lynn on Twitter at @SteveLynnBW.
No comments:
Post a Comment