CC Summer 1995: Canada's participation in Bioresource Hemp 1995
 
BIORESOURCE nice pic
HEMP
1995
 
flag of canada
Canada's representative at the Bioresource Hemp symposium was Gordon Reichert, an employee of the Market Analysis Division of Agriculture & Agri-Food Canada (AAFC). He explained that his department had become involved with cannabis through the publication of the December 16, 1994, edition of their Bi-Weekly Bulletin. This issue of the bulletin discussed the potential for industrial hemp in Canada, but he admitted that the AAFC did not expect the "unprecedented and highly positive interest" that they subsequently received from farmers and industry.

Gordon's trip to Frankfurt was funded in part by Canadian cannabis retail and research organizations. The Manitoba Hemp Alliance (This link is now for the Canadian Industrial Hemp Council, as the MHA site is no longer available. Dec 96) initiated and organized the cooperative venture, and received funding from Hemp BC, the Friendly Stranger, Shakedown Street, NORML Canada, Hemp Head, and others.


Licences
Gordon discussed the fact that cannabis can be legally grown in Canada only under licence from the Minister of Health, and only for research purposes. This clause means that expenses cannot be recouped by selling parts of the plant as fibre, seeds or oil, and that the RCMP monitors the plants at the expense of the farmer.

He suggested that his audience "keep in mind that the Canadian Narcotic Control Act was initially prepared over thirty years ago when industrial hemp was considered a drug." He also mentioned that Bill C-7 (which has now been withdrawn until next year) does not alter the provisions for cannabis cultivation.

Gordon explained that the Canadian Federal Department of Agriculture currently spends between $250 to $300 million on agricultural research every year. Aside from consultation, none of this was spent on researching cannabis. However, three provinces have established research and development funds for successful applicants, and more are expected to follow.


Industrial Hemp in Canada
Anyone applying for a licence to cultivate cannabis in Canada must provide detailed information regarding their research plan. This includes the potential location and number of plants to be grown, scientific methodology and purpose, names of all companies and individuals involved with the process, and most importantly, "any other information which the applicant feels will facilitate the issuance of a license."

Gordon explained that in 1994 one licence to cultivate cannabis was granted to a private Canadian company, Hempline Incorporated. This was the first legal hemp crop harvested in North America in nearly forty years. Hempline's initial research helped to catapult Canadian agriculture into the realm of industrial hemp.

At the time of the symposium no cannabis cultivation licences had yet been granted, although applications from all provinces had been received by the International Control and Licensing Division at the Bureau of Drug Surveillance. In an update to his report, dated May 23, Gordon wrote that the Canadian Ministry of Health had so far issued seven research licences to four individuals in two provinces for the 1995 growing season.

Gordon said that he expected there to be intensive lobbying from industry next year for legislative changes to permit the development of agricultural cannabis. It is anticipated that there will be applications totalling thousands of hectares on a national scale. He explained that the next six to eighteen months are going to be of "paramount importance" in attempting to re-establish the Canadian hemp industry, and that this will only come about with cooperation from all levels of government, the business community, researchers and academics, and the general public.

In the final paragraph of Gordon's report he writes that "Canada has both the human and natural resources required to be a key player in the expanding global hemp industry." It is only a matter of lifting the ban on cannabis and allowing Canadian farmers to get to work.

 
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