Rules On Hemp Relaxed

Marianne

New Member
The Health Ministry has announced it will relax the rules covering the cultivation of industrial hemp - the low-drug variety of the marijuana plant.

Hemp can be used to make edible oils, foods including milk and biscuits, and cosmetics. Its fibres can be used to make rope, textiles, paper and plastics and its by-products can be used as biofuels.

Before the regulation change, due to take effect on August 1, hemp grown in New Zealand was subjected to the same strict controls as the illegal drug cannabis.

Derek Fitzgerald, spokesman for the Health Ministry's drug safety agency Medsafe, said the new regulations still classified industrial hemp as a controlled drug, making it an offence to advertise it for psychoactive purposes or to supply it to unauthorised persons.

"(The rule changes) seek to balance growers' appeal for practical and reasonable requirements against the need to maintain adequate controls on hemp seed and plants," he said.

The decision has been welcomed by a major Canterbury producer of hemp seed oil, Oil Seed Extractions (OSE), which has contracted about 15 Mid-Canterbury farmers to supply hemp seed for its production of oils, including a nutritional supplement and a cold pressed culinary oil similar to olive oil, over the last five years.

Managing director Andrew Davidson said OSE and its parent company Midlands Seed had been lobbying for the change for five years. The companies had spent about $1 million.

"Now there's a lot more confidence for farmers in terms of producing and more confidence for us in terms of investing further in marketing."

Davidson said the changes would give new cropping options to Canterbury farmers.

Hemp advocate Warren Bryson, a member of the New Zealand Hemp Seed Association, said the rule change was a good first step.

Agricultural production would still be limited by a Food Standards Australia New Zealand ban on hemp foods other than oil.

Bryson said hemp-seed milk, bread, ice-cream and biscuits, readily available in Britain, were fantastic.

"It's much healthier for you ( compared to dairy products ) from a non-biased nutrition point of view. And you could use the by-products for making biofuels," he said.

The 0.5 per cent maximum tetrahydrocannabinol ( THC ) content allowable to commercial hemp growers under Medsafe rules also limited growers to only about 12 out of 1000 varieties.


Newshawk: Happykid - 420 Magazine
Source: New Zealand Truth (New Zealand)
Copyright: 2006 Independent Newspapers Limited
Contact: editor@truth.co.nz
Website: Independant News - News that cares for our world
 
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