Growers Hope Standards Bring Order To Hemp Industry 'Mess'
In this Thursday, June 13, 2019, photo, Jennifer Lane, a student intern at the Oregon State University Extension Center, plants a hemp seedling in a field at one of the research stations for Oregon State's newly announced Global Hemp Innovation Center in Aurora, Ore. The center will be the largest such research hub in the U.S. (AP Photo/Gillian Flaccus)
BY GILLIAN FLACCUS
AURORA, OREGON. (AP) ā A unit of wheat is called a bushel, and a standard weight of potatoes is called a century. But hemp as a fully legal U.S. agricultural commodity is so new that a unit of hemp seed doesnāt yet have a universal name or an agreed-upon quantity.
Thatās one example of the startling lack of uniformity ā and accountability ā in an industry thatās sprung up almost overnight since the U.S. late last year removed hemp from the controlled substances list.
A global hemp research lab announced Thursday in Oregon, coupled with a nascent national review board for hemp varieties and a handful of seed certification programs nationwide, are the first stabs at addressing those concerns ā and at creating accountability by standardizing U.S. hemp for a global market.
āIf you look at a lot of financial markets, theyāre all saying, āPeople are investing in this, and we have no idea what to divide it by,ā said Jay Noller, head of Oregon State Universityās new Global Hemp Innovation Center. āWe have hemp fiber. What is it? Whatās the standard length?ā
Oregon Stateās research hub will be the United Statesā largest and will offer a certification for hemp seed that guarantees farmers the seed theyāre buying is legitimate and legal. Thatās a critical need when individual hemp seeds are selling for $1.20 to $1.40 each ā and an acre of crop takes up to 2,000 seeds, Noller said.
Licensed hemp acreage in Oregon, which has an ideal climate for growing the crop, has increased six-fold since last year, earning Oregon the No. 3 spot for hemp cultivation after Montana and Colorado, according to Vote Hemp, which advocates for and tracks the industry in the U.S.
Four other states ā North Dakota, Colorado, Tennessee and North Carolina ā also have hemp seed certification programs. Other U.S. universities, such as Cornell in Ithaca, New York, have hemp research programs, but Oregon Stateās will be the largest, built on years of hemp research done in test fields in China, Bosnia and Serbia and now at 10 research stations sprinkled across the state. On Thursday, Oregon State researchers began to sow their third crop in a field in Aurora.
The new center dovetails with a greater movement to create a national infrastructure around hemp as the market explodes. Globally, the supply of hemp is less than 10% of the demand, and thatās driving states like Oregon to rush to stake a claim in the international marketplace, Noller said.
Across the U.S., the number of licensed acres of hemp jumped 204% from 2017 to 2018, according to Vote Hemp. And the market for a hemp-derived extract called cannabidiol, or CBD, is expected to grow from $618 million in 2018 to $22 billion in 2022 as its popularity as a health aide skyrockets.
The U.S. National Review Board for Hemp Varieties will start taking applications in the fall from growers who want to claim credit for specific genetic varieties of hemp. Once growers have secured a unique designation from the board, they can apply for a plant patent with the U.S. government so no other grower can produce that type of hemp.
A meeting in Harbin, China, in early July will bring together members of the global hemp industry to start to hash out critical details such as what to call a unit of hemp seed or the standard length of hemp fiber, Noller said. Other countries, such as China, have been growing hemp for years, but the industry lacks a universal standard countries can apply to trade, he said.
āThis is the first time in U.S. history where we have a new crop thatās suddenly gone from prohibited to no longer prohibited,ā Noller said. āWe have never had something like this.ā
Hemp growers like Trey Willison applauded the move toward greater transparency in a booming market.
Some novice farmers are falling prey to seed sellers who secretly, or even unwittingly, market seed that grows into āhotā cannabis plants, with THC levels too high to market legally as hemp, he said.
Hemp and marijuana are both cannabis plants but have different THC levels. Marijuana, illegal under federal law, refers to plants with more than a trace of THC. Hemp has almost no THC ā 0.3% or less under U.S. government standards.
States with hemp programs test for THC in the crops, but do so after the plants are grown and close to harvest. Crops that test over the THC limit for hemp must be destroyed ā and farmers with bad seed might not know until itās too late, Willison said.
In one case last year, an Oregon seed seller marketed seeds on Craigslist as having a 3-to-1 CBD to THC ratio ā but unbeknownst to farmers, the THC levels were still too high to be legal, he said. Several farms in Wisconsin, where agricultural hemp was just getting underway, bought the seeds and then went under when the resulting plants tested āhot,ā Willison said.
The seeds ālook identical, and you canāt tell them apart until four months into the year, when you know somethingās wrong,ā he said. āA bunch of farms failed, and it originated in Oregon.ā
Other sellers are marking up the cost of what he called āgarbage seedā as much as 1,000 times, said Willison, who started Unique Botanicals in Springfield, about 100 miles (160 kilometers) south of Portland, after leaving his marijuana-growing business due to a glut of weed in the Oregon market.
āA lot of people say, āIs your seed certified?ā and thereās no such thing as certified seed right now. Thereās no test, thereās no oversight. ... Thereās no proof of where the seed is coming from,ā he said.
āTheyāre trying. Itās at the very beginning, for sure, but they are trying to do something about this mess.ā
Flaccus is a member of APās marijuana beat team. Follow her on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/gflaccus . Follow APās complete marijuana coverage: https://apnews.com/Marijuana
BY GILLIAN FLACCUS
AURORA, OREGON. (AP) ā A unit of wheat is called a bushel, and a standard weight of potatoes is called a century. But hemp as a fully legal U.S. agricultural commodity is so new that a unit of hemp seed doesnāt yet have a universal name or an agreed-upon quantity.
Thatās one example of the startling lack of uniformity ā and accountability ā in an industry thatās sprung up almost overnight since the U.S. late last year removed hemp from the controlled substances list.
A global hemp research lab announced Thursday in Oregon, coupled with a nascent national review board for hemp varieties and a handful of seed certification programs nationwide, are the first stabs at addressing those concerns ā and at creating accountability by standardizing U.S. hemp for a global market.
āIf you look at a lot of financial markets, theyāre all saying, āPeople are investing in this, and we have no idea what to divide it by,ā said Jay Noller, head of Oregon State Universityās new Global Hemp Innovation Center. āWe have hemp fiber. What is it? Whatās the standard length?ā
Oregon Stateās research hub will be the United Statesā largest and will offer a certification for hemp seed that guarantees farmers the seed theyāre buying is legitimate and legal. Thatās a critical need when individual hemp seeds are selling for $1.20 to $1.40 each ā and an acre of crop takes up to 2,000 seeds, Noller said.
Licensed hemp acreage in Oregon, which has an ideal climate for growing the crop, has increased six-fold since last year, earning Oregon the No. 3 spot for hemp cultivation after Montana and Colorado, according to Vote Hemp, which advocates for and tracks the industry in the U.S.
Four other states ā North Dakota, Colorado, Tennessee and North Carolina ā also have hemp seed certification programs. Other U.S. universities, such as Cornell in Ithaca, New York, have hemp research programs, but Oregon Stateās will be the largest, built on years of hemp research done in test fields in China, Bosnia and Serbia and now at 10 research stations sprinkled across the state. On Thursday, Oregon State researchers began to sow their third crop in a field in Aurora.
The new center dovetails with a greater movement to create a national infrastructure around hemp as the market explodes. Globally, the supply of hemp is less than 10% of the demand, and thatās driving states like Oregon to rush to stake a claim in the international marketplace, Noller said.
Across the U.S., the number of licensed acres of hemp jumped 204% from 2017 to 2018, according to Vote Hemp. And the market for a hemp-derived extract called cannabidiol, or CBD, is expected to grow from $618 million in 2018 to $22 billion in 2022 as its popularity as a health aide skyrockets.
The U.S. National Review Board for Hemp Varieties will start taking applications in the fall from growers who want to claim credit for specific genetic varieties of hemp. Once growers have secured a unique designation from the board, they can apply for a plant patent with the U.S. government so no other grower can produce that type of hemp.
A meeting in Harbin, China, in early July will bring together members of the global hemp industry to start to hash out critical details such as what to call a unit of hemp seed or the standard length of hemp fiber, Noller said. Other countries, such as China, have been growing hemp for years, but the industry lacks a universal standard countries can apply to trade, he said.
āThis is the first time in U.S. history where we have a new crop thatās suddenly gone from prohibited to no longer prohibited,ā Noller said. āWe have never had something like this.ā
Hemp growers like Trey Willison applauded the move toward greater transparency in a booming market.
Some novice farmers are falling prey to seed sellers who secretly, or even unwittingly, market seed that grows into āhotā cannabis plants, with THC levels too high to market legally as hemp, he said.
Hemp and marijuana are both cannabis plants but have different THC levels. Marijuana, illegal under federal law, refers to plants with more than a trace of THC. Hemp has almost no THC ā 0.3% or less under U.S. government standards.
States with hemp programs test for THC in the crops, but do so after the plants are grown and close to harvest. Crops that test over the THC limit for hemp must be destroyed ā and farmers with bad seed might not know until itās too late, Willison said.
In one case last year, an Oregon seed seller marketed seeds on Craigslist as having a 3-to-1 CBD to THC ratio ā but unbeknownst to farmers, the THC levels were still too high to be legal, he said. Several farms in Wisconsin, where agricultural hemp was just getting underway, bought the seeds and then went under when the resulting plants tested āhot,ā Willison said.
The seeds ālook identical, and you canāt tell them apart until four months into the year, when you know somethingās wrong,ā he said. āA bunch of farms failed, and it originated in Oregon.ā
Other sellers are marking up the cost of what he called āgarbage seedā as much as 1,000 times, said Willison, who started Unique Botanicals in Springfield, about 100 miles (160 kilometers) south of Portland, after leaving his marijuana-growing business due to a glut of weed in the Oregon market.
āA lot of people say, āIs your seed certified?ā and thereās no such thing as certified seed right now. Thereās no test, thereās no oversight. ... Thereās no proof of where the seed is coming from,ā he said.
āTheyāre trying. Itās at the very beginning, for sure, but they are trying to do something about this mess.ā
Flaccus is a member of APās marijuana beat team. Follow her on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/gflaccus . Follow APās complete marijuana coverage: https://apnews.com/Marijuana
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