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DEA And Hemp Seed Oil

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Well,

 

Once again the DEA is trying to make hemp seed oil illegal. I spoke

to one of my oil suppliers and he told me that it got another stay,

but who knows for how much longer.

 

http://www.globalhemp.com/News/2003/April/canadian_hemp_sales_to_us.ht

ml

 

It actually is a rather ridiculous

thing to make hemp seed oil illegal since it contains such nominal

trace amounts of THC and it can't get you high even if you consumed a

whole barrel or bathed in it!

 

Contact you local law makers and tell them and the DEA that if they

are going to continue the " war on drugs " to get real and actually

focus on the business that is actually within the field of what they

are trying to accomplish, which does not include the sale of hemp

seed oil for heaven's sake!

 

Have a great weekend folks :)

 

*Smile*

Chris (list mom)

 

http://www.alittleolfactory.com

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

http://www.globalhemp.com/News/2003/April/canadian_hemp_sales_to_us.ht

ml

 

Canadian hemp sales to U.S. shaken

 

Sean Pratt, The Western Producer

 

Canada is once again in jeopardy of losing its biggest market for

hemp oil.

 

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration has issued its " final rules "

on cannabis products that prohibits human consumption of food

containing any amount of tetrahydrocannabinois, or THC.

 

Canadian regulations limit THC content in hemp to 10 parts per

million, but that isn't low enough to satisfy the DEA.

 

If it went unchecked, the agency's zero tolerance policy would close

the border for hemp products destined for American food and beverage

markets by April 21, 2003.

 

But all is not lost.

 

The DEA issued a similar edict on Oct. 9, 2001, that never went into

effect because the hemp industry won a United States Court of Appeals

stay on March 7, 2002.

 

Rather than duking it out in court, the DEA " sidestepped " the process

and issued a new rule governing cannabis products, said Arthur Hanks,

general manager of the Saskatchewan Hemp Association.

 

" That previous stay basically is irrelevant because there is a new

rule on the table, " he said.

 

A coalition of hemp importers and exporters are in the process of

requesting a second stay to combat the new final rules. Hanks fully

expects the U.S. Court of Appeals to grant another stay, but in the

meantime the trading atmosphere is foggy.

 

" Hemp is going to be working in a grey area again, " he said.

 

" It's not a comfortable situation. We're looking at this going, Œis

this going to be happening every year?' It grinds you. "

 

Canadian farmers seeded 3,800 acres of hemp in 2002 and harvested

about two million pounds of the crop. Hanks estimates half of that

will end up in the U.S., where there is no commercial hemp

production, and the other half will be consumed domestically.

 

The food market is the segment of the hemp industry with the best

margins, worth an estimated $10 million. Hemp-based cosmetics is a

larger volume sector with annual sales of two or three times that

amount.

 

Most industrial products are exempted under the new DEA rules, but

Hanks worries that cosmetics could be caught in the crossfire.

 

" If we're sending hemp oil over the border, how does the DEA agent

know it's going for cosmetics or not? "

 

He said the new rules give DEA officials too much discretionary power.

 

" It may force cosmetic manufacturers to relocate to Canada or to shut

down, " Hanks said.

 

The uncertainty has caused hemp plantings to plummet from 34,000

acres in 1999 to a little more than one-tenth that amount in 2002.

But Hanks encouraged interested growers to seriously consider

planting a small crop of 10-20 acres in 2003.

 

" It's a good risk to take if you can afford to take risk, " he said,

because the industry has gone from a state of overproduction to

undersupply.

 

" We're just not meeting our current demand right now so there's a

good reason to be planting hemp this year. "

 

Hanks is confident the ambiguity south of the border will be cleared

up once the industry secures another stay from the courts.

 

He said there is a groundswell of support for hemp products in the

U.S. that includes a new recruit, the powerful Organic Consumers

Association.

 

" That's serious troop strength, " Hanks said.

 

Unfortunately, American politicians are currently preoccupied by

troops of a different kind.

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