Sunday, March 30, 2014

Here Comes Ukrainian Hemp

By 
Source: opednews.com

So the United States wants to buy hemp from the Ukraine. I suppose we should be happy. Anytime the U.S. government gives a country money that is not earmarked for weapons, we probably shouldn't too closely examine the unelected neo-liberals and neo-Nazis handling the cash.  Nobody pays attention to the Saudi government or the oil, wars, and terrorism it provides in exchange for U.S. largesse.

Of course if the hemp buy is part of a larger package deal that impoverishes the Ukraine for the benefit of Western plutocrats, gets NATO's nose under the door, threatens Russia, and encourages the NED to hire the companies that name paint colors in hopes of finding unique names for all the revolutions it's going to plan next, we may want to oppose the whole package.

But isn't the precedent of connecting U.S. foreign policy in any way to a substance that benefits, rather than destroys, the environment of potentially great value?  While buying hemp abroad might be a move against permitting the production of hemp at home, won't it just further fuel the argument that it's insane to make U.S. companies import a raw material that they could much more cheaply grow (while creating jobs, restoring soil, slowing climate change, and garnering some 478 other benefits of hemp)?

Or is insanity just not that big a concern? Jon Walker has a book out called After Legalization.  And there's a book called Hemp Bound by Doug Fine.  These guys are convinced that marijuana and hemp are both about to be legalized in the United States.  One of their arguments is that doing so has majority support  -- and support, they stress, from across the political spectrum (Fine can't quote anybody without emphasizing that the person is NOT A HIPPIE).  "Since when do 80% of Americans agree on anything, as they do that the drug war is a failure?" asks Fine.

Well, let me count the ways.  I've been referring for years to this fine collection of polls:http://YesMagazine.org/purpleagenda In fact, 80% in the U.S. believe their government is broken, and I suspect they do so in part because so often their government ignores the will of 80% of the country, be it on ceasing to threaten Iran, investing more in green energy or education, or holding bankers to the rule of law.  Eighty percent and more usually support restoring money to the minimum wage, as it continues to plummet.  Ninety percent want higher fuel efficiency standards.  Eighty percent would ban weapons in space, enforce laws against torture, strengthen the United Nations, reduce the power and influence of big corporations, restore voting rights for ex-felons, create a justice system that does rehabilitation, allow immigrants to apply for citizenship, etc., etc.  Never mind the countless sane and important policies supported by 75% or 68% or 52% -- which damn well ought to be enough once in a while but almost never is.

Walker says the difference is that pot doesn't have any enemies.  Fine writes as if he expects no enemies either.  And yet, Fine refers repeatedly to the great damage hemp will do to oil companies and even to the war machine.  Now, I don't know to what extent there's truth behind the supposition that major corporate interests favored the banning of marijuana and hemp, as they had favored the banning of alcohol (they certainly benefitted from its being banned and remaining banned), but we know the oil companies killed public transit and the electric car and the Gulf of Mexico. These are not lightweights when it comes to amoral short-term struggles.  And you can add to them the petrochemical, plastics, timber, alcohol, tobacco, and pharmaceutical drug companies, as well as the herbicide companies (hemp doesn't require any), the agribusinesses currently subsidized, and -- last but not least -- the urine testing, property seizure, police and prison industries -- including the prison guard unions.  Oh and let's not neglect the State Department that wants to buy hemp from abroad as carrots for austerity schemes, and the foreign nations from whom the hemp is bought.  Who in their right mind would put sanity up against that whole crowd? I'm not even counting people too ignorant to distinguish hemp from marijuana, or who think marijuana kills you, or whom Jesus told pot comes from the devil.

Of course, I hope we will legalize hemp immediately (I mean nationally, I'm aware of the steps many states are taking). It's just going to require a great deal of effort, I'm afraid.

Then there's another worry.  Will marijuana and hemp be legalized but monopolized, corporatized, and Wal-Martized? Walker says pot won't be because nobody would buy it.  Fine says the same of hemp, and that the U.S. should ban GMO hemp from the start, as Canada has done -- as if banning GMO anything in the U.S. were as easy as passing a billion-dollar subsidy for a space weapon that threatens Iran, weakens the U.N., makes us dumber, and damages the atmosphere.  For hemp to sell, Fine writes, it has to keep a positive image that includes "a quest for world peace" -- which I take to mean more quoting Nobel laureates on packaging than funding the peace movement.  But who's going to know it's GMO if labeling on such points is banned?

Legalization is entirely doable, and the pressures in its favor are indeed likely to grow, but it's going to require huge public pressure.  Where books like Walker's and Fine's are most helpful is informing that little snippet of the public that reads books of the incredible benefits to be gained.  Hemp is apparently the healthiest food on earth, both for feeding people and for feeding farm animals whom people eat or from which people eat the eggs or drink the milk.  The same crop of hemp can, if all goes well, produce material stronger than steel or softer than cotton.  And the same crop can, in theory, produce a third thing at the same time, from yet another part of the plant: fuel.  You can build your tractor out of hemp, fuel it with hemp, and use it to harvest hemp -- hemp that is busy restoring your soil, preventing erosion, and surviving the drought and climate change.  You can do this while eating and drinking hemp and wearing clothes made of hemp and washed with hemp in your house also made of hemp and lime -- a house that sucks carbon out of the atmosphere. (The list of products and benefits is endless.  One that Fine cites is body armor, although how that fits into the quest for world peace is not clear.)

I'm not a fan of devoting acres needed for food production to fuel production, but a crop that produces both fuel and food (and building materials) -- if it really can do all that at once -- might alter the calculation.  Biofuel aside, hemp has more than enough benefits to start investing in it right now, if sanity were on the table.  Take the U.S. troops stationed in 175 countries and reduce that total by 5 countries per year.  Instead, buy those countries' hemp AND invest billions in our own (hire the former troops to grow it).  It's win-win-win, except for whichever profiteers have their interests in the wrong place.  Watch out for them.


Hemp Seed Imports Weighed as Non-Lethal Aid to Ukraine

By Alan Bjerga
Source: cannabisculture.com


The U.S. Department of Agriculture is seeking to help Ukraine’s battered 
economy by bolstering imports of its hemp seed.

Ukrainian hemp -- a cousin of marijuana -- lacks the active ingredient that gives pot smokers a high, and is prized for commercial and industrial applications. Hemp seed can be used in high-protein oils or for making paint and plastics.
“We are now involved in trying to figure out ways in which we might be able to use the industrial hemp seeds that are created in the Ukraine in the U.S.,” Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said yesterday in an interview.
Ukraine, the world’s fourth-biggest producer of hemp seed, is seeking aid from the International Monetary Fund and other nations as it struggles with a four-month political crisis capped by Russia’s annexation of Crimea. The currency has plunged almost 25 percent against the dollar this year. Ukraine is seeking as much as $20 billion from the IMF, which may announce a decision as soon as today.
President Barack Obama has urged Russia to de-escalate the crisis over Ukraine or face more sanctions should it encroach further into the east of the country after its annexation.

Full Story: 

The U.S. Department of Agriculture is seeking to help Ukraine’s battered economy by bolstering imports of its hemp seed.
Ukrainian hemp -- a cousin of marijuana -- lacks the active ingredient that gives pot smokers a high, and is prized for commercial and industrial applications. Hemp seed can be used in high-protein oils or for making paint and plastics.
“We are now involved in trying to figure out ways in which we might be able to use the industrial hemp seeds that are created in the Ukraine in the U.S.,” Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said yesterday in an interview.
Ukraine, the world’s fourth-biggest producer of hemp seed, is seeking aid from the International Monetary Fund and other nations as it struggles with a four-month political crisis capped by Russia’s annexation of Crimea. The currency has plunged almost 25 percent against the dollar this year. Ukraine is seeking as much as $20 billion from the IMF, which may announce a decision as soon as today.
President Barack Obama has urged Russia to de-escalate the crisis over Ukraine or face more sanctions should it encroach further into the east of the country after its annexation.
The Obama administration is planning to provide aid, including $1 billion in loan guarantees, and is working with European allies on a broader package. Military assistance has been limited to about 25,000 rations for the Ukrainian armed forces, U.S. Rear Admiral John Kirby told reporters on March 24.
“Our focus from an interagency perspective here in the United States, is on the non-lethal side of those requests,” Kirby said of Ukrainian appeal for assistance.

Hemp Cultivation

Currently, 10 U.S. states allow cultivation of industrial hemp. The farm bill Congress passed last month will allow colleges, universities and state agriculture departments to grow hemp for research purposes if allowed by the state.
Legal restrictions on the agricultural product, once widely cultivated in the U.S., have eased as marijuana has gained greater acceptance.
France, China and Chile were the world’s top hemp-seed producers in 2012, according to the United Nations. Ukraine produced 900 metric tons on about 2,100 hectares (5,200 acres) of land.
Ukraine is the world’s third-biggest exporter of corn and sixth-biggest of wheat. Vilsack said he had seen no signs of disruptions to Ukraine’s grain markets as a result of the turmoil.
The country’s plunging currency is raising concern that farmers may buy less fuel and pesticides even as this year’s planting accelerates to the fastest pace in six years. Farmers may sit on supplies waiting for the currency to stabilize, Dmitry Rylko, general director of the Moscow-based Institute for Agriculture Market Studies, said in a speech in Geneva March 20.
To contact the reporter on this story: Alan Bjerga in Washington at abjerga@bloomberg.net


Nebraska senators OK bill that allows growing industrial hemp for research

Source: omaha.com

LINCOLN – Nebraska lawmakers passed a bill Thursday that would dip the state's toes into industrial hemp production.

Legislative Bill 1001, passed 39-2, would allow the University of Nebraska and State Department of Agriculture to grow industrial hemp for research. 

The measure, introduced by Sen. Norm Wallman of Cortland, mirrors the new federal farm bill, which makes such research an exception to federal drug laws. 

Industrial hemp is a close plant cousin to marijuana but has very little of the high-inducing tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC. 

Supporters say it could be a good alternative crop for Nebraska farmers and could be used to produce a multitude of products. Opponents worry that legalizing industrial hemp would be a step toward legalizing marijuana.




3 Operations In Weld County Get Hemp Approval

Source: denver.cbslocal.com

CBS4's Lauren DiSpirito talks with farmer Kirk Eppelsheimer about hemp farming (credit: CBS)
CBS4′s Lauren DiSpirito talks with farmer Kirk Eppelsheimer about hemp farming (credit: CBS)

GREELEY, Colo. (AP) – Three Weld County applicants have permission to grow hemp under Colorado regulations that took effect this year.
In an article Wednesday, The Tribune reported the three were among 10 commercial and 11 research-and-development applications approved by the state agriculture department.
Hemp cultivation for research and development has been authorized by Congress, but commercial cultivation remains illegal under federal law.
Hemp and marijuana are cannabis, but hemp doesn’t contain enough THC to be used as a drug. Hemp has textile, food and other uses.
Colorado, which has legalized marijuana for medical and recreational use, is among 10 states that allow hemp cultivation despite federal drug laws.



Kentucky Readies Hemp Pilot Projects Thanks to Farm Bill Provision

By Tim Thornberry
Source: bizlex.com

Little time was wasted in getting the hemp initiative moving forward in Kentucky since passage of the Farm Bill.
The national agriculture legislation contained a provision to allow hemp research plots in those states where laws had already been passed allowing for the revitalization of the crop. Agriculture Commissioner James Comer announced the creation of hemp pilot projects in the state, which supporters hope will mean the beginning of bringing hemp back to regular production in a place that once led the nation in industrial hemp production.
“Our goal is to have, by the end of March, in detail, all the pilot projects and who’s going to participate in them and exactly what the objective is,” he said. “We’re still trying to determine a few things and working closely with Attorney General Jack Conway to make sure everybody is on the same page.”
It was Conway who, in response to concerns voiced from “various stakeholders including law enforcement officials throughout the state, members of the General Assembly and members of the public,” sent an advisory letter late last summer to Kentucky State Police Commissioner Rodney Brewer, issuing his understanding of state and federal law as it pertains to growing hemp.
In that letter, Conway said it was illegal to grow industrial hemp without express authorization from the federal government under both federal and Kentucky law.
That authorization, at least in the form of research, has been granted by way of the recently passed Farm Bill, and Conway’s office has worked closed with Comer to ensure compliance with the guidelines set forth in legislation.
“I appreciate Commissioner Comer working with the Office of the Attorney General as he implements the pilot projects in Kentucky,” Conway said.
According to information provided by the Kentucky Department of Agriculture, Comer has asked Conway to “contact federal border patrol entities on behalf of the commonwealth of Kentucky to make certain hemp seeds for the pilot project are legally imported for the purposes outlined in the Farm Bill.”
Conway has also pledged to work with Comer to help pursue a federal waiver from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration that would allow for the expansion of industrial hemp production for commercial purposes, noted the KDA.
Comer said the cooperation between agriculture and law enforcement is a critical element of moving this industry forward.
“I appreciate Attorney General Conway’s willingness to open the lines of communication and help us overcome the legal obstacles to this new market for Kentucky farmers,” he said.

Initially, five projects have been announced and will be conducted at Eastern Kentucky University, Kentucky State University, the University of Louisville, Murray State University and the University of Kentucky.
Each project will research five different aspects of the plant, using five different seeds.
“I think it’s important we do this research for a year or two because we don’t know which variety of seed grows best on which type of soil or which farm equipment will harvest the hemp,” said Comer.
Brian Furnish, chair of the Kentucky Hemp Commission, said some of this research can be conducted on private land via an amendment to the Farm Bill brought forth by U.S. Senator Mitch McConnell.
“The bill allows the Department of Agriculture to work with individuals who own the farms to do these projects and the universities will oversee them,” he said.
Furnish added that by getting some of the work in the hands of the farmers, it may speed up the project.
“Our biggest issue is, in the next year or two, finding the variety of hemp from wherever in the world, that will grow the best in Kentucky,” he said. “Just because a hemp plant grows well in Canada or China or any other place in the world that grows hemp, doesn’t mean that it will grow well in Kentucky. It will take a little while to figure that out.”
Furnish noted that he wouldn’t want to see a lot of acreage planted in the wrong type of seed which could produce problems.
He also said that companies that serve in the hemp industry, from seed development to manufacturing, in other parts of the world have offered their assistance to the state in finding the answers to these questions.
“We don’t want to give farmers false hope that they can go out here and plant 200 acres and it’s going to be profitable just because they put it in the ground,” Furnish said. “We need to walk before we run in this project.”


High time we explore hemp’s many uses

By Tony Budden
Source: iol.co.za

IOL ct hemp house lounge-to-kitchen
"Grow your own house" with Hemp

With close to 40 countries growing low-THC industrial hemp, South Africa is falling behind, says Tony Budden.
Cape Town - South Africa
Cannabis… it certainly seems to be popping up in all sorts of strange places lately.
The mainstream media seem finally to be giving the plant some positive space, not just focusing on the “dangers” and reporting on the different initiatives around the world to get it liberated, a far cry from the old days of the “groen-gevaar”, the devil’s weed.
The plant has found its way into the hallowed halls of Parliament lately, with the submission of the Medical Innovation Bill by Dr Mario Oriani-Ambrosini that includes medical marijuana as a potential treatment for cancer patients, of which he is one.
In the bill is also reference to the economic and industrial uses of the plant, which is why Hemporium was invited to display our hemp products and samples outside the assembly doors during the parliamentary debate.
IOL  ct hemp-house-6
With more and more cannabis finding its way into houses, cars, cosmetics, paper, and even plastics, it is sobering to think that more money and energy has been spent on eradicating it from the planet during the failed war on drugs than just about any other war, says the writer.
HEMPORIUM
We had plenty of interested MPs and a few ministers come and learn about and touch the various industrial hemp products that included textiles, construction materials, food products, cosmetic and body-care products, paper, oil, twine, rope, carpets and more, all made from this easy-to-grow resource that grows in four to five months without the need for agro-chemicals.
A certain group showed more interest than most – the Khoi/san, Griqua and Koranna chiefs who were there for a sitting of the House of Traditional Leaders.
I was told with great excitement how the cannabis plant has been used by the indigenous people since way before colonial time for medicinal, recreational and fibre purposes.
It is a plant that has always been seen positively by traditional healers and indigenous groups, and it is thanks to them that a lot of the knowledge that is now being “rediscovered” about cannabis is knowledge that they have never lost, only been prevented from using (legally).
Another strange place that cannabis popped up is in construction materials, with the idea that you can “grow your house”.
Hemporium constructed a hemp house in Noordhoek that is constructed with hempcrete (a mix of chipped hemp stalk and lime), hemp insulation (made from the hollow hemp fibre) and hemp chipboard.
The soft furnishings such as carpets, curtains, couches and bed linen all were made from hemp too.
Hempcrete has been dubbed “the better-than-zero-carbon” building material, and the houses built with it are not only eco-friendly, but are healthy, breathable and well insulated.
With economies of scale, all of these products could be competitive with the price of traditional building methods, as has been shown in Europe, with Marks & Spencer building their latest flagship store using hempcrete.
If we evaluated construction materials on the true costs, including the environmental and social costs, hemp would win every time.
Cannabis is also appearing in your cosmetics, with many brands such as the Body Shop using super-moisturising and absorbent hemp seed oil as a base ingredient.
Hemporium’s own range is locally made and is an example of the kind of industry that rural communities could get into with minimal technology if they were allowed to grow and process it.
If you are still suffering from the affliction of cannaphobia, best you avoid health food stores, and even giants like Woolworths and Spar, where hempseed nutritional products are being sold openly.
Before you cry “boycott these drug dealers”, you should know that hemp seeds are not psychoactive (which may be a disappointment to some) and are grown from non-drug varieties of industrial hemp.
The only high you will get from them is the natural one you receive from eating a food that contains immune-boosting omega 3, 6 and 9 in the optimum ration for the human body and really good protein (globulin edestin) that is easily digested.
The hemp food market has grown incredibly quickly in the US and Canada, where over 24 000 hectares have just been planted to keep up with demand.
Now I know some of you connect the surfing culture with cannabis use already, but industrial cannabis is now finding its way into surfboards too (and not for smuggling purposes).
Some shapers are experimenting with replacing fibreglass with sustainable “fibregrass”. Local fin manufacturer Scarfini is using hemp and bamboo to make a composite fin and the CSIR’s BioComposite Centre of Competence in Port Elizabeth is researching using hemp in automobile and plane parts as the pressure on those industries to use biodegradable products grows.
If you drive a BMW or Mercedes-Benz, there is a good chance that cannabis has even found its way into your car’s door panels and dashboard.
You may already be wearing cannabis, with hemp fabric being used by international designers such as Donatella Versace, Ralph Lauren and Donna Karan in their ranges and local labels Bastion, The Joinery, Dark Horse, Veldt and even kiddy clothing brand Eco-Punk all taking advantage of the positive qualities of organic hemp fabric.
Hemp fibre, prized for its fineness, strength and recyclability, has even found its way into bibles, banknotes and cigarette papers.
Many hardware stores are also peddling cannabis as it is not uncommon to find eco-hemp ropes, twines and even plumbers’ hemp, which is used to seal connections, on their shelves.
So, with more and more cannabis finding its way into medicine cabinets, food, houses, cars, cosmetics, paper, and even plastics, it is amazing to think that more money and energy has been spent on eradicating it from the planet during the failed “war on drugs” than spent to fight just about any other war.
Industrial hemp was kept illegal with the assistance, and in some cases insistence, of the petrochemical, paper and cotton industries who saw it as competition and used marijuana abuse to justify banning the whole plant. This makes as much sense as banning corn products because some people make moonshine liquor out of the plant.
Cannabis, whether it was used industrially, medicinally or recreationally, was banned in just about every country around the world and still it is coming back stronger than ever and in ways never before imagined. Maybe we should just accept that it belongs here?
With close to 40 countries now growing low-THC industrial hemp, South Africa is falling behind, but we have the potential to catch up and overtake many of them.
We have the space, the climate, people needing jobs and the industrial capabilities to become a world leader in the use of renewable resources such as hemp.
We know we cannot necessarily compete with the “cheap and nasty” giants, but if we build “Made in South Africa” as sustainable, natural and organic-produced in a Fair Trade co-operative environment, we have the potential to really shine and set a leading example to the world.
The economic benefits will come too. The retail food and fibre hemp industry in the US has grown to R5 billion a year in the past 10 years.
An article from the Shanghai Daily tells how China plans to bring one million people out of poverty, using hemp, by 2020.
In Europe, Australia and Canada, eco-friendly houses are being built and hempcrete can help alleviate some of the housing challenges we face, while creating many new jobs.
Farms would need to grow it, factories to process and manufacture the products, and many new retail brands to market hemp will be needed, all boosting the green economy.
Many states in the US, as well as in Canada and soon Uruguay, are also collecting vast sums in tax revenue from medicinal and recreational use of the plant, and rural communities are becoming sustainable again through growing cannabis to meet the growing demand.
We believe it is time to re-evaluate this abundant resource, allow the indigenous people to use it as they always have and apply modern science and processing methods to let it reclaim its rightful place as the premier eco-resource as demand for natural and organic products grows worldwide.
The word “canvas” comes from the same root as the word “cannabis”, and even our Afrikaans word for shirt is… “hemp”, so this is part of a positive move back to working with nature for our survival, instead of trying to dominate it.
You can discover cannabis on the big screen at the Labia on Orange Street at 6pm on Saturday. As part of the inaugural Cape Town Eco Film Festival, Hemporium will be hosting the premiere of Bringing it Home, the latest industrial hemp documentary produced in the US, which shows the history behind the criminalisation of the plant, right up to contemporary uses and the current situation around the world.
* Tony Budden is the marketing director of Hemporium, www.hemporium.com. He will participate in a Q&A session and audience discussion after the screening of Bringing It Home on Saturday. For more information on the festival, see www.capetownecofilmfestival.co.za – tickets at webtickets.co.za or the Labia box office at 021 424 5927.


Wednesday, March 26, 2014

West Michigan hemp processors say Colorado's liberalized pot laws will help their business grow

By Jim Harger
Source: mlive.com


Refined and unrefined hemp oil sold by local product line Yellow Emperor can be used as a dietary supplement. Currently, industrial hemp industries import 100 percent of oil used in their product lines due to federal prohibition of domestic hemp farming. With regulation changes, Bluegrass Natural Remedies is seeking to work with domestic farmers to create jobs in the industrial hemp market.

PLAINFIELD TOWNSHIP, MI – Colorado’s liberalized marijuana laws will help the expansion plans of a local company that manufactures and distributes industrial hemp-based food supplements and cosmetics, according to Joe Brown, founder of Michigan Hemp Co.
Brown, who said his company’s products do not contain the psychotropic drug found in marijuana, said Colorado farmers are now being given permission to raise and sell domestic hemp products that his company currently imports from Canadian and Dutch hemp growers.

“We’ll be able to create jobs with a domestic hemp crop,” said Brown, who said his 5-year-old company processes industrial hemp oil with five employees at a facility in Holt. “We’re hoping to go to 50 people in the next 24 months.”

The company, which also goes by the name, North American Hemp Company and Canna Products USA, sells its products under several brand names, including Tommy Chong, Yellow Emperor and Bluegrass Natural Remedies.

Chong, best known for his role in Cheech and Chong, a comedy team that epitomized the 1970s drug culture, is working with them to produce hemp products under his name and will endorse their products, according to a news release issued by Canna Products USA.

All of their products are made with industrial hemp oil that does not contain THC, the active ingredient that gets marijuana users high, Brown said. The oil is tested by customs officials before it enters the U.S. to ensure it is free of psychotropic drugs, he said.

As a born-again Christian “since birth,” Brown said he’s not interested in getting his customers high or getting into the medical marijuana business, where “compassionate care” providers are running afoul of the law.

“We wouldn’t even touch it,” said Brown, who distributes his products locally from Home Grown Hydroponix, a store at 5333 Plainfield Avenue NE that serves hydroponic gardeners and growers, many of whom grow medical marijuana.

His business partner, Adam Benge, the CEO of Bluegreen Natural Remedies, said he worked for five Michigan beer distributors before deciding to leave the alcohol business for something less harmful to his health. Brown said he cannot disclose how much they pay to have hemp oil shipped into the United States.

“We could buy a nice house (for the cost of) a shipment,” said Brown, who said he started the company to address his own personal health needs.

With a domestic source of hemp oil, his company will be able to produce more of its products and lower its prices, said Brown.

The company’s most popular product, the E-mist vapor oil, is inhaled like an electronic cigarette. An E-Mist kit sells for $90. A hemp oil infused brownie or a tablet sells for $10 each. The company also sells 8-ounce bags of “Java Joe’s Hemp Coffee” for $20.

Although they cannot make medical claims, Brown said he takes their supplements as an anti-inflammatory and anti-anxiety remedy.

Founded in 2009, Canna Products USA claims to be the first Michigan company since 1937 to legally manufacture industrial hemp products. Prior to entering the hemp business, Brown said he was a project manager in the construction industry for 20 years.


Global Hemp Group Inc. Welcomes Key New Members to Its International Advisory Board

Source: sys-con.com

SURREY, BRITISH COLUMBIA -- (Marketwired) -- 03/25/14 -- GLOBAL HEMP GROUP INC. ("Global" or the "Company") (CSE:GHG)(FRANKFURT:ANI) is pleased to announce the addition of 3 prominent international business leaders to its International Advisory Board.
As a continuation of the Company's global outreach efforts, and to strengthen the Company's government and industrial relationships, the Company is welcoming these new members to its influential group of international business leaders who will provide invaluable advice to the Board of Directors and CEO. Each of these individuals brings a wealth of knowledge in their areas of expertise, which will contribute significantly to the overall advancement of the hemp industry and the success of our company. Members of the International Advisory Board (IAB) will introduce hemp to their influential global network of business and political leaders, and potential new markets that span across many industries. The IAB now consists of leaders from Asia, Europe, Africa, North America and the Caribbean.
Ms. Dominique Cahn brings years of experience as a corporate and association executive with responsibility for international and US government public health policy initiatives, including those focused on US Congressional and Executive branch action with respect to medical devices, biotechnology, and FDA reform, and will advise the Company on government relations strategy.
Mr. Nathan Armstrong brings over 20 years of industry experience as a design engineer and entrepreneur developing innovative products and companies. Nathan is a board member of several Alberta Technology Advocacy Groups and is the recipient of many awards including Top 40 Under 40, ASTech and TechRev Awards.
Wenzhao "Connie" Wang, founder and managing attorney at US China Global Law Group, has more than 20 years of extensive international experience with an emphasis on China gained through her distinguished diplomatic and legal careers. Ms. Wang was honored as "Women in Business 2006" by Minneapolis-St Paul Business Journal, "World Outstanding Chinese" by World Outstanding Chinese Yearbook 2006," and San Diego's Top Attorneys" by SD METRO in 2012 and 2011.
Mr. Charles Larsen, CEO says "The addition of these accomplished individuals strengthens our international advisory board and is key to the success of our rapidly expanding global initiatives".
ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD
Charles Larsen, President & CEO
Frankfurt 49.69.173 226 6672
To view Global Hemp Group, Inc. on the Canadian Securities Exchange under symbol GHG click HERE.
To view Global Hemp Group, Inc. on the Boerse-Frankfurt Exchange/Xetra exchange under symbol ANI click HERE.
U.S. investors can purchase symbol "GHG" on the Canadian Securities Exchange or symbol "ANI" on the Boerse-Frankfurt Exchange and Xetra Exchange. These shares are made available through your preferred U.S. Stock Broker.
This press release, required by applicable Canadian laws, is not for distribution to U.S. news services or for dissemination in the United States, and does not constitute an offer of the securities described herein. These securities have not been registered under the United States Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or any state securities laws, and may not be offered or sold in the United States or to U.S. persons unless registered or unless an exemption from such registration is applicable.
Forward Looking Statements - Certain information set forth in this news release may contain forward-looking statements that involve substantial known and unknown risks and uncertainties. These forward-looking statements are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties, certain of which are beyond the control of the Company, including, but not limited to the impact of general economic conditions, industry conditions, volatility of commodity prices, currency fluctuations, dependence upon regulatory approvals, the availability of future financing and exploration risk. Readers are cautioned that the assumptions used in the preparation of such information, although considered reasonable at the time of preparation, may prove to be imprecise and, as such, undue reliance should not be placed on forward-looking statements.
The CSE has not reviewed and does not accept responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.
Contacts:
Global Hemp Group Inc.
Charles Larsen
President & CEO
604-592-6881
www.GlobalHempGroup.com

Hemp aid: US considers buying industrial cannabis from Ukraine to bolster its economy

Source: rt.com

Image from wikipedia.org

The US Department of Agriculture is looking to boost imports of hemp seeds from Ukraine, hoping this will help the country’s battered economy. However, they still do not know what it will be used for.
“We are now involved in trying to figure out ways in which we might be able to use the industrial hemp seeds that are created in Ukraine in the US,” Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack told Bloomberg in an interview Tuesday.
Ukraine is the world’s fourth-biggest producer of industrial hemp seed, the term used to refer to cannabis strains cultivated for non-drug use. Unlike another, most known type of Cannabis grown for marijuana, industrial hemp lacks that same ingredient, THC, which causes physical or psychological effects and gives smoker a high.
Industrial hemp, being one of the earliest domesticated plants known, has many uses from healthy food to making paper, textiles, biodegradable plastics, construction and even fuel.
Easy to cultivate, uses for industrial hemp are growing rapidly.
Ukraine is currently angling for aid from the International Monetary Fund, as much as $20 billion, while it has also been struggling with months of political crisis.
The Obama administration is planning to provide a $1 billion loan for the coup-imposed government of Ukraine, and is working with European allies on a broader package.


Minnesota industrial hemp bill clears first hurdle

By Janet Kubat Willette

Source: agrinews.com

ST. PAUL — A bill authorizing industrial hemp research in accordance with federal law cleared the first committee hurdle March 21.

HF2315, authored by Rep. Phyllis Kahn, DFL-Minneapolis, passed both the House ag policy and Government Operations committees before the deadline for policy bills to make it out of all the policy committees in the body of introduction.

The bill now moves to the House ag finance committee.

The bill takes the language in the federal farm bill and makes it law in Minnesota, Kahn said. It would allow industrial hemp research plots in the state.

It is the first step, she said, in allowing farmers to grow industrial hemp in Minnesota.

Kahn has been a longtime proponent of industrial hemp, introducing the legislation in various forms since at least 2008.

She has worked with a legislator in Hawaii and a legislator in North Dakota on industrial hemp legislation. In North Dakota, the legislator is Rep. David Monson, a Republican from Osnabrock, who is a farmer near the North Dakota-Canada border.

Industrial hemp production is legal in Canada.


'Cosmos,' Cannabis and Robert Hooke

Source:


British scientist and inventor Robert Hooke reportedly "experimented with cannabis" as early as 1682.


In a discussion of 17th Century scientists on the latest episode of Cosmos, host Neil deGrasse Tyson says Robert Hooke "experimented with cannabis" as early as 1682.
The story goes that Hooke's friend, sea captain Robert Knox, bought back "a strange intoxicating herb like hemp," a.k.a. "Indian hemp" or "bangue," from one of his trips and gave it to Hooke. Speaking at the British Royal Society in 1689, Hooke said Knox "has so often experimented it himself, that there is No Cause of Fear, tho' possibly there may be Laughter." This is considered to be "the first detailed description of cannabis in English."

Cannabis was known as Indian hemp and bangue.

In the Hooke section on Cosmos, deGrasse explains: "He was possibly the most inventive person who ever lived… Hooke's insatiable curiosity encompassed absolutely everything. Hooke discovered a little cosmos, and we still call it by the name he gave it - the cell. Hooke discovered the cell by looking at a piece of cork with one of his own inventions - the compound microscope. He anticipated aspects of Darwin's theory of evolution by almost 200 years. Hooke also improved the telescope. The drawings he made of the astronomical bodies he observed attest to his uncanny precision. After the great fire destroyed Central London in 1666, Hooke partnered with the architect Christopher Wren to redesign and rebuild the city. Hooke was the foremost experimentalist of his age. Using coiled springs, he derived the Law of Elasticity, known today as Hooke's Law. He perfected the air pump, the height of technology in its time, and used it to experiment on respiration and sound. And he experimented with cannabis. He reported to a meeting of the Royal Society that a sea captain friend of his 'had so often experimented with it that there is no cause of fear though possibly there may be of laughter."
It should be noted that Cosmos executive producer Ann Druyan, who co-wrote the original show with her then husband Carl Sagan, is on the NORML Advisory Board. In 1969, Sagan wrote: "The illegality of cannabis is outrageous, an impediment to full utilization of a drug which helps produce the serenity and insight, sensitivity and fellowship so desperately needed in this increasingly mad and dangerous world."
Watch Cosmos Sundays at 9 pm ET on Fox and Mondays at 10 pm on National Geographic.



Hemp Seed Imports Weighed as Non-Lethal Aid to Ukraine

By Alan Bjerga 
Source: businessweek.com

The U.S. Department of Agriculture is seeking to help Ukraine’s battered economy by bolstering imports of its hemp seed.
Ukrainian hemp -- a cousin of marijuana -- lacks the active ingredient that gives pot smokers a high, and is prized for commercial and industrial applications. Hemp seed can be used in high-protein oils or for making paint and plastics.
“We are now involved in trying to figure out ways in which we might be able to use the industrial hemp seeds that are created in the Ukraine in the U.S.,” Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said yesterday in an interview.
Ukraine, the world’s fourth-biggest producer of hemp seed, is seeking aid from the International Monetary Fund and other nations as it struggles with a four-month political crisis capped by Russia’s annexation of Crimea. The currency has plunged almost 25 percent against the dollar this year. Ukraine is seeking as much as $20 billion from the IMF, which may announce a decision as soon as today.
President Barack Obama has urged Russia to de-escalate the crisis over Ukraine or face more sanctions should it encroach further into the east of the country after its annexation.
The Obama administration is planning to provide aid, including $1 billion in loan guarantees, and is working with European allies on a broader package. Military assistance has been limited to about 25,000 rations for the Ukrainian armed forces, U.S. Rear Admiral John Kirby told reporters on March 24.
“Our focus from an interagency perspective here in the United States, is on the non-lethal side of those requests,” Kirby said of Ukrainian appeal for assistance.

Hemp Cultivation

Currently, 10 U.S. states allow cultivation of industrial hemp. The farm bill Congress passed last month will allow colleges, universities and state agriculture departments to grow hemp for research purposes if allowed by the state.
Legal restrictions on the agricultural product, once widely cultivated in the U.S., have eased as marijuana has gained greater acceptance.
France, China and Chile were the world’s top hemp-seed producers in 2012, according to the United Nations. Ukraine produced 900 metric tons on about 2,100 hectares (5,200 acres) of land.
Ukraine is the world’s third-biggest exporter of corn and sixth-biggest of wheat. Vilsack said he had seen no signs of disruptions to Ukraine’s grain markets as a result of the turmoil.
The country’s plunging currency is raising concern that farmers may buy less fuel and pesticides even as this year’s planting accelerates to the fastest pace in six years. Farmers may sit on supplies waiting for the currency to stabilize, Dmitry Rylko, general director of the Moscow-based Institute for Agriculture Market Studies, said in a speech in Geneva March 20.

Entrepreneur says alternative kenaf, hemp crops could be boon for small-scale farmers

By Elizabeth Adams
Source: kyforward.com

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Martin Smith believes both kenaf and hemp are the ‘wave of the future.’(Photo provided)


The crops kenaf and hemp have a long list of uses – from biofuels to string fibers to chicken bedding. But Martin Smith believes the most important purpose for these plants will be to create new economic opportunities for small-scale farmers in Kentucky and in developing communities around the world.
Smith, who heads up the Lawrenceburg-based company United Global Co-Opportunities, conducts research on alternative crops kenaf and hemp, which have more than 25,000 possible uses. Both hemp and kenaf are fiber-bearing tropical plants in the Cannibus family. In addition to being sources for paper, plywood, animal feed, human food, clothing and burlap, the crops have the capability of producing biofuel alternatives. The crops can also be used as an inexpensive means of producing electricity.

“It’s obviously the wave of the future when you think about all the things that are failing to supply our needs on the large scale,” Martin said of growing the crops. “The timing is perfect to implement small scale production models – not just here, but globally.”

Currently, Ford Motor Co. is using kenaf in the door panels of its Ford Escape, and other car manufacturers, including Toyota, are experimenting with these materials as well. Hemp has also been used in sustainable hempcrete houses, which have shown to improve heating and cooling efficiency. Smith’s company is currently working on a project to create energy-efficient hempcrete houses for communities in Appalachia.

Growing up on a few acres in the Ozark Mountains, Smith developed an appreciation for small-scale farmers. He was exposed to agricultural challenges throughout the world during his time in the Navy. The mission of his company, which he established in December 2012, is to offer an on-farm production model for kenaf and hemp that will support the minority farmer. He is in the process of developing a 75-acre kenaf operation and greenhouse pilot project in Eminence with the goal of creating partnerships to support other Kentucky operations.

Already, the United States imports more than $4 billion of twine annually. Smith’s company is developing a model so farmers can produce these crops in Kentucky to add value to their businesses. Based on this model, United Global Co-Opportunities will provide the technology and resources to help farmers take the crops to the marketplace.

“The small farmer is in great jeopardy, and this is the way for them to make the largest splash in the marketplace right here on our Kentucky farms,” Smith said.

Smith said there are opportunities expand the production to developing countries, such as Ghana and Haiti, where struggling communities can benefit by participating in the co-op. The program, called Seeds for Needs, would encourage sustainable economies and create an economy that Smith said doesn’t currently exist in the United States. Eventually, Smith envisions a global network of co-ops that will be tied back to Kentucky.
“These applications will be applied to countries around the world that are in lack, so that those communities will have some of the same opportunities as we do, and they will get to enjoy many of the things we may take for granted,” Smith said.


California Secretary of State Debra Bowen Announces a New Marijuana and Hemp Initiative Enters Circulation on March 24, 2014

Source: goldrushcam.com

March 24, 2014 - SACRAMENTO - Secretary of State Debra Bowen today announced the proponent of a new initiative may begin collecting petition signatures for his measure.

The Attorney General prepares the legal title and summary that is required to appear on initiative petitions. When the official language is complete, the Attorney General forwards it to the proponent and to the Secretary of State, and the initiative may be circulated for signatures. The Secretary of State then provides calendar deadlines to the proponent and to county elections officials. The Attorney General's official title and summary for the measure is as follows:

MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION. INITIATIVE STATUTE.Legalizes under state law marijuana and hemp use, possession, cultivation, transportation, or distribution. Requires case-by-case review for persons currently charged with or convicted of nonviolent marijuana offenses, for possible sentence modification, amnesty, or immediate release from prison, jail, parole, or probation. Requires case-by-case review of applications to erase records of these charges or convictions. Requires Legislature to adopt laws to license and tax commercial marijuana sales. Allows doctors to approve or recommend marijuana for patients, regardless of age. Limits testing for marijuana for employment or insurance purposes. Bars state/local aid to enforce federal marijuana laws. Summary of estimate by Legislative Analyst and Director of Finance of fiscal impact on state and local government: Reduced costs potentially exceeding $100 million annually to state and local governments related to enforcing certain marijuana-related offenses, handling the related criminal cases in the court system, and incarcerating and supervising certain marijuana offenders. Potential net additional tax revenue of a few hundred million dollars annually related to the production and sale of marijuana and industrial hemp, a portion of which is required to be spent on marijuana-related research and other activities. (14-0008.)

The Secretary of State's tracking number for this measure is 1658 and the Attorney General's tracking number is 14-0008.

The proponent for the measure, Berton Duzy, must collect signatures of 504,760 registered voters (five percent of the total votes cast for governor in the 2010 gubernatorial election) in order to qualify it for the ballot. The proponent has 150 days to circulate petitions for the measure, meaning the signatures must be submitted to county elections officials by August 18, 2014.

The proponent can be reached at (805) 402-1212.