Growing use as old cannabis stereotypes are debunked

Cannabis has been used for medicinal purposes for centuries, but despite the therapeutic benefits of the plant, international regulators ultimately deemed it unsafe for the public due to its marijuana derivative for many years.

There are many unhelpful cannabis stereotypes pushed by politicians and media that prevent people from accessing this medicine. The marijuana plant, which is part of the cannabis family, is linked to containing the majority of THC cannabinoids, which cause the psychoactive effects that cannabis is generally associated with.

However, extensive research and studies have revealed that cannabis can be successfully used to treat a variety of medical conditions. For example, researchers suggested that cannabis can effectively be used as an alternative to traditional opioids to treat moderate to severe pain.

Cannabis stereotypes

A study published in the Journal of Psychoactive Drugs evaluated over 1,000 subjects taking legal marijuana. Among the participants, 65% of the people said they were taking cannabis for pain treatment and 80% of the group found it very or extremely helpful.

As a result, this led to 82% of the group reducing or eliminating their over the counter (OTC) medication intake. Notably, 88% of the group mentioned that they were able to completely stop taking opioid painkillers. Furthermore, 74% of the subjects said that marijuana helped them sleep better.

Chronic pain and insomnia are two of the most prevalent medical conditions that adults suffer from and Dr Gwen Wurm, Assistant Professor of Clinical Pediatrics at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, highlighted that 20% of American adults suffer from chronic pain and one in three do not get enough sleep in general.

Furthermore, as research and studies continue to better develop our collective understanding of the plant, scientists are debunking the cannabis stereotypes. This, in turn, is driving the large influx of first-time users to the cannabis industry.

Global legal market

As such, according to data compiled by Zion Market Research, the global legal marijuana market was valued at USD 16.71 Billion in 2017. By 2024, the market is projected to reach USD $62.96bn (~€57.15) while registering a CAGR of 21% during the forecast period between 2018 and 2024.

More than half the US has legalised cannabis for medical purposes and Canada had moved to legalise medical cannabis for specific medical purposes back in 2001.

Health Canada split medical patients into two different categories based on their medical diagnosis: Category 1 patients are eligible for a medical cannabis prescription if they suffer from severe pain, muscle spasms, anorexia, weight loss, nausea from cancer, HIV/AIDS, and epilepsy. Meanwhile, Category 2 patients are those who have debilitating symptoms of medical conditions, other than the ones listed in Category 1.

Since then, the Canadian government had fully legalised adult-use cannabis in 2018, but still imposes regulations and certain restrictions on cannabis-based products.

These emerging products are expected to deliver annual revenues of more than CAD $2.5bn (~€1.71) and generate higher profits for retailers than cannabis products that are already legal, according to Deloitte’s annual cannabis industry report, such as regular flower.

Notably, certain Canadian provinces, such as Ottawa, are already finalising their regulations in anticipation of the legalization of alternative cannabis products. However, although Health Canada did not release any further comments on the matter, the Canadian federal government noted that the legalisation of edibles, extracts, and topicals will come to pass “no later than October 17, 2019”.

Deloitte also expects more first-time users to end into the industry and try cannabis for the time following the legalisation as cultivators and producers are beginning to ramp up operations in efforts to create a large inventory for the future.

Why regenerative farming is the future of cannabis cultivation

The sweet scent of Pineapple Punch — Elysian Fields’ signature strain — fills your nostrils the moment you set foot on the 50-acre off-grid cannabis farm in Mendocino County. It makes you want to take really deep breaths. The three farmers who run the place are all under 40 and at least one of them grew up in these hills learning to cultivate cannabis outdoors, writes Danielle Simone Brand.

As licensed growers working with Flow Kana, a syndicate of craft cannabis cultivators, Elysian’s farmers produce about 500 pounds of commercial cannabis each year alongside cut flowers and vegetables like peppers, tomatoes, and squash. Regenerative farming techniques are in use here: Cover crops protect the soil and companion planting enriches it; non-toxic pest management techniques safeguard the wellbeing of pollinators and wildlife; the abundance of open space ensures that farming has low impact on the land; and working animals like sheep and chickens control weeds, fertilize, and aerate the soil. A giant German shepherd/wolf mix helps keep the farm running smoothly, too. 

Elysian Fields and its neighboring farms have history here. In the 1970s, those following the back-to-the-land impulses of the hippie movement came to Mendocino’s hills to homestead. They found cannabis a natural cash crop because the region is well suited to growing outdoors and was, for a time, remote enough to dodge law enforcement. 

Because of its elevation and hilly terrain, agricultural mega-corporations (“Big Ag”) never made it to the region. But cannabis thrives; today, an estimated 80 percent of the cannabis consumed in the U.S., as well as a staggering amount of biodiversity within the plant’s genetics, comes from Mendocino, Humboldt, and Trinity Counties — a.k.a. the Emerald Triangle. Well before adult use took effect in California, it was one of the hubs of the cannabis industry. But while the estimated 53,000 small pot farms in the region may have good product, they often lack the means to efficiently test, process, package, and label that product. They also lack a statewide distribution system. 

That’s where Flow Kana comes in. Founded by a husband and wife team, Michael “Mikey” Steinmetz and Flavia Cassani, Flow Kana is a relatively new venture that’s partnering with small, licensed farmers all over the region by offering them a pipeline to market. At a recent Flow Kana event called Cannabis as a Catalyst for Change, situated on the sprawling campus of the former Fetzer winery estate in Redwood Valley, Steinmetz pointed out that small farmers alone don’t have much of a chance in the new market. But he and his team are seeking to prove that cannabis doesn’t have to go the way of Big Ag, and that decentralized models can work. “Craft and scale aren’t mutually exclusive,” Steinmetz told the crowd of cultivators, retailers, manufacturers, investors, journalists, and other industry folks. 

For now, it seems to be true. According to BDS Analytics, Flow Kana, offering numerous strains of sungrown cannabis produced by a network of about 200 small farmers, is the best-selling flower brand in the state. The vision is to do good for the earth and the farmers while purveying good quality weed. 

Environmental Critiques of the Cannabis Industry

Cannabis is a plant, of course, and according to Mendocino farmers and the folks at Flow Kana, that means it’s supposed to be grown outdoors. But prohibition drove the industry toward indoor cultivation, which involves massive inputs of fossil fuels for controlling light and temperature, the use of pesticides and artificial fertilizers, as well as large water needs. And while outdoor growers — particularly those still selling on the illicit market — can also mismanage water resources and use toxic chemicals, those partnering with Flow Kana are all licensed by the state and vetted for their earth-friendly chops.

Indoor cannabis cultivation focuses on one thing — cannabis as a monoculture. That stands in opposition to more traditional, outdoor farming techniques that seek to preserve diversity in plant and animal species. What’s more, indoor cultivation is hard on the growers themselves. Spending long hours in crowded rows under harsh lights is a far cry from days spent with sun, living soil, and fresh air. 

In other words, it’s hard to grow indoor cannabis in an environmentally sustainable way that also promotes the wellbeing of cultivators. However, indoor plants do have certain advantages that consumers like. For instance, THC percentages from indoor plants tend to be higher, and the flowers’ appearance and scent may seem more attractive. And while many consumers still seek out the highly prized indoor strains, Flow Kana is trying to change the narrative of what constitutes good quality weed. 

How Cannabis Can Do Good for the Environment

Farmers in Flow Kana’s network are using the regenerative farming techniques detailed above; they consider companion planting, the use of rainwater catchment systems, and diversified crop portfolios, among other practices, to be “beyond organic,” where improving the land is the bottom line — the primary purpose of cultivating cannabis. Big Ag, along with the fossil fuels industry, is hugely responsible for the current climate crisis, and small-scale farming has much less impact on the land. Further, outdoor growers tend to cite cannabis’ ability to sequester carbon and thereby help reduce the total CO2 percentage in the atmosphere.

Changing the Narrative of Quality Cannabis

Even beyond its more positive environmental impact, farmers at the event argued that their cannabis, grown in living soil, is actually tastier and more appealing — if you know what to look for. Though the market seems to chase higher concentrations of THC like those found in indoor grows, elevated THC content doesn’t necessarily translate to a better consumer experience. Craft cannabis — like certain craft beers — may have lower THC concentrations on average, but many consumers are finding that the rich taste and diverse profile of cannabinoids and terpenes yields an equally or even exceedingly pleasurable experience.

Another factor driving the market is terroir, a term often used in the wine industry to indicate the nuances of a wine’s flavor based on its geographical origins. In cannabis, too, the notion of terroir is starting to catch on. "It's made of the place," says Tina Gordon, owner and operator of Flow Kana partner Moon Made Farms, of the cannabis she cultivates. “Like the rain that’s sitting in the pond — that pond may have been there for hundreds of thousands of years. And the microbiome — the indigenous microorganisms — they’re all going to influence the tone, the scent, the frequency, and the vibration of the flower.”

Gordon’s 9,600 square foot outdoor canopy spanning 40 acres has achieved Sun + Earth certification, a third party vetting process that ensures growers are living up to regenerative farming standards and treating workers fairly. She’s now in the process of attaining a second designation, DEM Pure, a peer-to-peer certification with similar requirements.  

“I think people are starting to ask the question, ‘where did my cannabis come from?’” Gordon told Civilized. “Where and when was this flower cultivated? Who cultivated it? What was the intention behind this flower? Because there are options — and for different people, different things are going to matter.” For her part, she hopes that consumers will vote with their wallets and their pipes for sungrown cannabis from Northern California. 

Price may also help drive consumer’s choices, as sungrown cannabis is more affordable at the dispensary because it’s cheaper to produce. It’s a rare scenario where the less expensive product is also the more earth-friendly and farmer-friendly choice. 

Hemp Has a Role

For some in the industry, it’s about much more than what we smoke or consume. Winona LaDuke, the 1996 and 2000 Green Party vice presidential candidate on Ralph Nader’s ticket, is an indigenous rights activist and hemp farmer who wants to talk about the clothing industry. At the conference, LaDuke made the case for a renaissance of hemp farming and processing in her home state of Minnesota, where hemp mills once flourished. Cotton, she says, uses massive water and pesticide inputs while synthetic textile alternatives are often derived from petroleum. “We’re addicted to fossil fuels,” she told conference attendees. “We’re even wearing them.” 

On the White Earth Indian Reservation where LaDuke farms, environmental stewardship is integral. “Our land is our garden,” she said. “We need to ask ourselves, ‘what is our relationship to the land we live on?’” And replacing cotton and synthetic fabrics with regeneratively grown hemp is an actionable step toward a better relationship to our land and the earth as a whole.

For many small, outdoor cultivators in the hills of Mendocino, growing cannabis is a legacy and a livelihood — but also a passion. As Tina Gordon of Moon Made Farms put it, “I completely fell in love with this plant, and it changed my life.”

New call for unified global CBD testing standards

New standardized purity tests would prevent unscrupulous CBD companies gaming the system to secure favorable results, says a U.K. industry body.

The London-based Centre for Medicinal Cannabis (CMC) is to gauge the appetitive for a new set of internationally-recognized CBD testing guidelines. In a press release the CMC says it has appointed leading chemist Dr Parveen Bhatarah, to investigate how to overcome the ‘barriers to analytical method standardization in the CBD-space’.

Recent research from the CMC highlighted the size of the problem currently facing the industry.

CBD Compliance Concerns

It found out of 29 of U.K. CBD products that underwent testing, 11 had less than 50% of the advertised CBD content. This was reinforced by the Cannabis industry Trade Association Chairman Mike Harlington who said in some recent tests just 11% of CBD products were able to verify their content claims.

And a third U.K industry trade body CannaPro never shirks its responsibility in policing its members having recently withdrawn the compliance certificate of a CBD retailer. In a press release the CMC says standardised methods have yet to be developed, and, as a result products can show different results depending on who does the testing. 

Shopping For Favorable Results

‘This can lead to companies shopping around for favorable testing results that do not truly reflect what the products contain,’ it says. It recommends a new standard method agreement would aim for equivalence when testing for things like; carcinogenicity, heavy metals, residual solvent, mycotoxins, pesticides and terpenes

Dr Bhatarah said her collaborative research initiative will be made up of CMC members and continued: “If there is no standardisation, there is no recourse for companies or customers to question test results. The lack of standardisation is hurting the industry’s ability to present cogent arguments on key matters such as defining zero-detectable THC.”

She went on to such harmonization is critical for this rapidly expanding new industry to adhere to national, European and International standards criteria, such as European Commissions Novel Food authorization.

Emerging cannabis packaging companies are trying to address legal weed’s plastics problem

The idea behind Ron Basak-Smith's cannabis packaging company was simple.

"I love cannabis," says the co-founder of Denver's Sana Packaging, "and I hate what packaging waste is doing to the environment."

Sana Packaging is one of a few new companies, including Boulder's STO Responsible and Oakland's SunGrown Packaging, that are attempting to solve cannabis's plastic waste problem. Though there's no data yet on how much packaging waste is generated by the newly legal industry, anyone who has ever walked into a dispensary has probably noticed that every product is contained in its own, typically disposable, package. In Oregon, that's primarily due to Oregon Liquor Control Commission regulations—like most states with legal weed, Oregon requires anything that comes out of a dispensary to be encased in odor-proof and childproof packaging. Plastic is often the cheapest option.

So while at grad school at the University of Colorado Boulder, Basak-Smith and business partner James Eichner began what would become Sana Packaging, which manufactures tubes for pre-rolls and vape cartridge tubes, plus rectangular containers for flower and edibles, out of hemp-based and reclaimed plastic. The company officially launched last year.

Creating eco-friendly packaging for cannabis businesses seems like a no-brainer. "There's an ethos within the cannabis space that wants to do better for the environment," says Basak-Smith. "There's a lot of people in the cannabis space that care about the environment."

But even now that multistate, regulation-approved options are available, sustainable packaging is far from the norm. For now, companies like Sana serve a niche market. In a sense, they're trying to create a demand more than serve one. At 25 cents each, Sana's pre-roll tubes are more than three times as expensive as plastic tubes. That's a tough sell in a highly competitive industry that's still in its infancy. Especially in Oregon, where the market is inundated with surplus crop, it can be tough to convince financially desperate farmers and dispensaries that they need to invest in packing.

"The biggest thing is going to be willingness to pay," says Basak-Smith. That and taking the onus off the consumer: "The mindset that consumer education is what is going to solve this problem is a little shortsighted. Companies that are manufacturing these materials should be using some percentage of reclaimed or recycled material, or a plant-based plastic or something along those lines."

For small farms, sustainability often comes at a cost. One of Sana's Oregon clients is Rising Leaf Farms, a natural, sun-grown operation just south of Eugene in the foothills of the Cascades. In its three-year history, Rising Leaf has never used single-use plastic to package its products. That's required the farm's four owners to get creative. Before they could find a sustainable company that could custom-make pouches for half-gram pre-rolls, Rising Leaf bought from a bulk seller, and cut down and resealed each package themselves.

Even now, Rising Leaf hasn't been able to eliminate waste from its supply chain. Its compostable pre-roll bags aren't considered childproof, so the OLCC requires dispensaries to place the product in a plastic "exit bag" after it's sold.

In order to be deemed child-resistant, cannabis packaging has to be tested by a third party. "It's an uphill battle to be considered child-resistant," says Rising Leaf co-owner Stephanie Doan. "I think the question is, is the child-resistant packaging really necessary?" Nicotine and alcohol, both of which are poisonous in smaller doses than cannabis, do not require childproof packaging. But there's hardly a movement to change the regulations for those industries.

"I think there's too many other things to worry about," says Doan's partner in Rising Leaf, Jason Brainard. "By the time you rewrite the book, you're three, five years out."

"And then you're broke," adds Doan.

Basak-Smith agrees that reducing cannabis packaging waste on a large scale is a multifaceted issue. Still, he sees the fact that the industry is still finding its feet as an opportunity.

"Because it's a new industry, it has the ability to get off on the right foot," he says. "If we don't invest now and invest in unsustainable practices, it's going to be harder to change that further down the road."