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SA Landraces with Cannabis Plants. and species-min.png
The Chief made his submission to Parliament on 23 May 2023, saying that local landraces were used for  a variety of purposes, including industrial use. He appealed to MP's to support the Mpondoland legacy growers as they were being increasingly marginalized by cannabis reform.

Voice of Reason from Mpondoland: Chief Zwelinkhanyile Diko Tells Parliament: Keep it Simple, Just Classify Local Landraces as Industrial Cannabis

The Justice Department took flak in Parliament this week during stakeholder input into the Cannabis for Private Purposes Bill where it became evident that state law-makers are clueless as to what Government's intended vision for cannabis is. They remain conceptually and technically completely out of their depth - and lazy to boot as they have not bothered to bring any rational evidence to back up what is truly a pathetic legislative interpretation of the 2018 Constitutional Court ruling legalizing the private consumption of cannabis.

Justice Dept Admits No Rational Evidence Behind Plant Limits in Cannabis Bill as State Lawyers Come Under Fire in Parliament

Cannabis and solar power to be the key economic recovery drivers in rebuilding the devestated community of Jagersfontein following the flood disaster eight months ago.

Re-Imagining Xhariep: Free State Launches Mega Cannabis Project in Jagersfontein After Last Year’s Mine Dam Tailings Disaster

UN Says Every Country in the World Should Be Allowed to Grow Hemp

Cannabiz Africa/Hemp Today

7 December 2022 at 14:00:00

A new UNCTAD report says the every country should be allowed to grow low-THC cannabis and that if nations could put together an international regulatory system, the global hemp market’s value could reach US$18 billion by 2027.

The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) has made a surprisingly bold call that every country in the world should be allowed to grow hemp. It also recommends that THC% limits in hemp goods be regulated in “finished products” rather than“in the field”.


According to its annual Global Hemp Report, the global hemp market could  reach $18.6 billion by 2027 “if nations around the world take action to clarify the crop’s legal status and address other key issues”.


It says that the “cultivation of non-intoxicant C. Sativa L. cultivars should be permitted in all countries even though it may require strict governmental control.


“Moreover, an approach favouring THC threshold in final products, rather than in the field, should be adopted to incentivize a whole-plant approach and uses,” the report says.


“Hemp value chains can boost growth in rural areas and contribute to both manufacturing and food-processing industries. However, to fully exploit such potentialities, countries may have to take specific actions,” according to the report, which marks the first time an international intergovernmental body has issued a paper promoting the use of industrial hemp.


The 84-page report defines the steps that governments can take to capitalize on hemp for its economic and social potential, gives an overview of industrial hemp by output categories, and shows how those hemp subsector derivatives are reflected in trade statistics.


Citing figures from researcher Krungsri Research Intelligence, a part of Bangkok-based Bank of Ayudhya, the report suggests the next five years could see the market value of hemp quadruple from the estimated $4.7 billion recorded in 2020.


Clarifying the legal status of hemp as a non-intoxicant is the first step governments need to take in order to minimize legal and financial risks for producers, the report observes.


Alternatively, increased THC thresholds for crops “on the field” up to levels scientifically recognized as non-intoxicant could be put in place by lawmakers. “This would allow increasing the pool of varieties useable in hemp production chains, thus de facto increasing the possibility to cultivate cultivars best adapted to specific environmental conditions and characteristics,” according to the report.


Other production constraints imposed by regulatory frameworks also must be identified, and strategies should be developed for regional cooperation to establish viable and sustainable value chains, the report also suggests.


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