Source: hempindustrydaily.com
The United States may be driving innovation in international marijuana markets, but when it comes to hemp, U.S. producers are scrambling to catch up with established trade opportunities for a crop that has long been legal in other countries.
Hemp is taking root in the United States, thanks to the 2014 Farm Bill, which allowed limited production. But booming U.S. demand for hemp products is still largely filled by overseas producers.
According to the U.S. Congressional Research Service, hemp imports surged an astounding 1,200% between 2005 and 2015 – from $5.6 million to about $78.2 million.
Most of that growth was in hemp seeds, both viable for planting and sterilized and hulled for eating.
The United States imported a negligible amount of hemp seeds in 2000, but that sum climbed to $54.1 million in 2015, according to CRS.
That doesn’t mean that U.S. hemp producers and processors don’t have ample opportunity to expand in global markets.
Marijuana Business Magazine talked with hemp producers and activists about the best international opportunities for exporting hemp and hemp-derived products.
Click here to read more on where they expect to see the most business opportunities in coming years:
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