By Andy Kerr
Abstract
The widespread use of industrial hemp could
result in numerous environmental benefits,
including but not limited to: (1) less reliance
on fossil fuels, especially from foreign sources;
(2) more efficient use of energy; (3) less
long-term atmospheric build-up of carbon dioxide;
(4) forest conservation; (5) agricultural
pesticide use reduction; (6) dioxin and other
pollution reduction; and (7) landfill use
reduction. Hemp is superior to many other plants
for many uses. Present limitations on the use of
industrial hemp are economically, environmentally
and socially irrational.
Moving from the Hydrocarbon to the
Carbohydrate Economy
The term "carbohydrate economy" was
coined by David Morris of the Institute for Local
Self Reliance, and North American Industrial Hemp
Council founding board member.
Anything we make from a hydrocarbon can be
made from a carbohydrate. The many wonderful
products that come from hydrocarbons come with a
large price: pollution that is massive and
difficult to deal with. Every one of the products
and benefits we receive from hydrocarbons
(ancient and nonrenewable plant and animal
material) can also be had from carbohydrates (new
and renewable plant material). From a pollution
standpoint, hydrocarbons are inherently dirty,
carbohydrates are inherently clean.
We can get much of our industrial feedstock
from the farm, rather than the oil well or the
mine. We can grow our fuel domestically, rather
than periodically going to war overseas for it.
Why Industrial Hemp
Hemp has beneficial characteristics not
offered by other plants. North American
Industrial Hemp Council board member Jeff Gain is
the chair of the Agriculture Research and
Commercialization Corporation, a USDA corporation
seeking to promote the "bio-based"
economy. He has also served as chief executive
officer of both the American Soybean Association
and of the National Corn Growers. He believes
industrial hemp is the next soybean.
Hemp, because of its very long fibers, rapid
growth, and the versatile oil from seed, can be
manufactured into many products. It can
competitivelyboth economically and
technicallyreplace industrial feedstocks
which are inherently polluting and unsustainable.
Hemp fiber can be used to make bio-based plastics
and construction materials. The long fibers of
hemp can be used in making composite plastics
which, while not as strong as fiberglass, is
strong enough for many applications. There are
also worker safety benefits, it's recyclable and
is priced lower than glass.
Shortening the Carbon Cycle
In marked contrast to petroleum, growing our
fuel from annual plants, means that the carbon
that is released into the atmosphere is captured
by next year's growth. Long-term build-up of
carbon in the atmosphere from fuel burning ends
if we switch to annual plants. Because of its
fast growing nature, hemp may be a major
contender in the processing of bio-based fuels.
Forest Conservation
Industrial hemp has great potential to
displace much of the wood currently being used
for fiber in this nation. In the Upper Midwest
and South, it appears that hemp fiber can be
grown less expensively than wood fiber for use in
paper.
One of the largest paper companies has told
NAIHC Board President Bud Sholts, that if hemp
can be grown in Wisconsin, they will be using it
for 45% of their feedstock at their mill on the
Fox River within five years. Similarly, Another
huge paper company intends to move 90% of their
world feedstock to non-forest sources within 10
years and see hemp as a major component of that.
Being international, if they can't grow hemp in
the US, they will grow it where they can.
A very large and diversified construction
products firm, believes that hemp can supplant
wood and make better panel products.
(See The Larch Company paper Potential of
Industrial Hemp to Displace Fiber From Forests.)
Pollution (Especially Dioxin) Reduction
One of the most serious pollution problems is
from various compounds of chlorine. A major
contributor to dioxin (arguably, the deadliest
chemical we've ever come up with) is emissions
from paper mills. Consider Wisconsin's Fox River.
It has a string of paper mills and is the largest
contributor of dioxin to the Great Lakes. A USDA
Forest Service marketing analysis (available from
North American Industrial Hemp Council), which
was withdrawn under pressure from the White House
Office of National Drug Control Policy, shows
that all of Wisconsin's "fine" (usually
means chlorine bleaching) paper production from
wood could be made with hemp, and quite
profitably to the farmers. Curtis Koster, NAIHC
board member and long associated with new
products research for International Paper
(world's largest paper maker), says the
low-lignin content of hemp (compared to wood)
makes it possible to pulp with less chemicals.
Hemp produces a naturally brighter pulp. If
bleaching is desired for maximum brightness, hemp
is very conducive to hydrogen peroxide bleaching
with the only byproducts being water and oxygen.
Another serious pollution problem is
off-gassing of formaldehyde and other noxious
compounds from the binders used in panel
construction products. Hemp fiber is compatible
with new soy-based binders, eliminating any toxic
side-effect.
Sustainable Agriculture
Hemp is naturally resistant to most pests, so
it doesn't need pesticides or herbicides. In
rotation, it leaves a weed-free field for the
next crop. Huge reductions chemical use can be
achieved by returning to rotation agriculture.
Hemp grown in rotation with wheat in England
resulted in a 20% increase in wheat yield,
without any commensurate increase in chemical or
energy inputs. In Ontario, hemp grown in rotation
with soybeans reduced cyst nematode infestation
by 50-75%, reducing the need for chemical
pesticides.
A limiting factor in sustainable agriculture
is the lack of profitable rotation crops. Hemp
could be quite profitable. Studies in Wisconsin
and Kentucky suggest that per-acre profits from
hemp could exceed most other crops. Hemp's
extensive root system and the falling leaves in
the field (the stalks are what are sought) leave
better soil tilth. Hemp needs fertilization, as
it consumes a lot of nitrogen. Because it is
fast-growing and has an extensive root system, it
might be useful in removing excess nitrogen
fertilizer from fields, thereby reducing
agricultural runoff problems. On fields where
nitrogen is the limiting factor to crop growth,
hemp requires about 50% of the nitrogen
fertilizer as corn.
50% of all pesticides used in this country are
associated with cotton. Hemp can substitute for
many uses of cotton.
Farmers are losing money on corn, wheat and
soybeans. In North Dakota, farmers have been
making more by selling the wheat straw to a
particle board plant than from selling the grain.
Hemp can make a difference in the agronomic
equation. Due to the bulkiness of the fiber,
local processing facilities will have to be built
near the farms. This can provide new jobs for
rural America.
Recycling/End Use Efficiency
Product recyclability is an increasing
concern. Fiberglass is notoriously
non-recyclable. The hemp substitute is quite
recyclable. Adding long-fiber hemp pulp to
recycled paper greatly increases the number of
times it can be recycled before the fibers are
too short.
Any product made from plant material is
inherently easier to either recycle or decompose
at the end of its life.
Conclusion
Our knowledge hemp is limited. What we do
suggest that hemp can be an important part of
moving from a hydrocarbon to a carbohydrate
economy. Very little research and development
funds have been invested and will not be until
the regulatory climate changes in the United
States. 30 other industrial democracies can
distinguish between industrial hemp and marijuana
(both are Cannabis sativa). Marijuana has
high amounts of THC, its psychoactive ingredient.
While THC is detectable in industrial hemp, it is
not a threat to anyone. (See the North American
Industrial Hemp Council's Hemp and Marijuana:
Myths and Realities). Hemp is being grown in
England, France and Canada. The Bobbies, Gendarme
and Mounties are not concerned.
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