| For Immediate
Release
Tuesday, January 25, 2005
CONTACT: Adam Eidinger at 202-744-2671
New Congressional
Research Service
Report Available on Industrial Hemp
Calls for Reform Prompt Investigation and Analysis
by Congress
WASHINGTON, DC —
Earlier this month, the Congressional Research Service
(CRS) issued a new report on the industrial hemp marketplace
and legislative efforts to allow hemp farming in the
United States. “Hemp as an Agricultural Commodity”
is a comprehensive report on the status of U.S. industrial
hemp policy and highlights the fact that we are the
only developed country to ban farmers from growing non-psychoactive
industrial varieties of Cannabis.
The report may be viewed online at:
www.VoteHemp.com/PDF/CRS_Hemp_Report.pdf
The report features background on the
current situation, data on foreign hemp production and
U.S. consumption, analysis of the legal situation regarding
hemp foods, and a review of economic studies. “We
are very pleased the Congressional Research Service
has issued this report and hope that members of Congress
will conclude from the research that the U.S. is falling
behind other developed nations on industrial hemp cultivation
and technology,” says Eric Steenstra, President
of Vote Hemp. “I believe we will see federal legislation
introduced this year to allow farmers to grow non-psychoactive
hemp for the first time since the 1950s.”
According to the CRS report, “For
centuries, the plant species
Cannabis sativa has been a source of fiber and oilseed
used worldwide to produce a variety of industrial and
consumer products. Currently,
more than 30 nations grow industrial hemp as an established
agricultural commodity. About 14 of those sell part
of their production on the world market.” It goes
on to say, “No legislation to legalize hemp has
been introduced to date at the federal level. Some states,
however, have considered a variety
of initiatives with increasing frequency, especially
since 1995. Between 1995 and 2002, 53 bills were introduced
in state legislatures, and 25 of those passed, according
to the 2002/2003 report of
Vote Hemp, one of the industry’s trade groups.
Currently, at least 14 states have hemp-related laws
in effect, Vote Hemp reports.”
“Farmers are asking, if it's legal
to import and sell hemp products here in the U.S., why
can't we grow hemp here in the U.S.? Automobile parts,
paper, clothing, food, personal care products and more
are all being made from hemp, yet the American farmer
is left out of the expanding
marketplace, now estimated at more than $200 million
in annual North American retail sales,” says Steenstra.
In February of 2004, the Hemp
Industries Association (HIA) won its three-year
legal battle against
the Drug Enforcement Administration's (DEA’s)
misguided attempt to ban safe and nutritious hemp foods.
The market for hemp seed and oil products that the DEA
tried to eliminate is now among the fastest-growing
in the natural products industry, which itself is among
the fastest-growing sectors of the U.S. economy.
Visit www.VoteHemp.com to learn more about
hemp. For more information
or to arrange interviews with representatives of the
hemp industry, please call Adam Eidinger at 202-744-2671.
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