There’s a long-forbidden crop on the verge of legalization, one that’s versatile and could open up new markets for farmers: hemp.
“I believe, honestly, that [hemp] is the only thing that’s really gonna bring agriculture out of the rut that it’s been in for the last 30 years,” hemp farmer Ryan Loflin said.
He lives in Colorado, one of at least 35 states that can grow hemp mainly through research pilot programs. That was a provision championed by U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell in the 2014 farm bill.
This year, the Kentucky Republican is calling for complete federal legalization of hemp in the Senate’s version of the farm bill, which funds safety net programs for farmers and major food assistance programs. Doing so would remove the crop from the list of controlled substances, where currently it’s lumped in alongside drugs like heroin. Unlike its close cousin, marijuana, hemp contains very little THC — and it has lots of industrial applications, from textiles to construction materials and livestock feed.
McConnell has said hemp has the attention of younger farmers in his state, once a leader in hemp production before the plant was made illegal in 1941. Some of that might be because of drought and plunging commodity prices for corn and soybeans, which are in the crosshairs of an impending trade war.
Either way, the enthusiasm isn’t just in Kentucky, though some industry leaders warn farmers to be cautious.
What farmers are waiting for?
Loflin drives his white pickup to a field near Colorado Springs, where he first planted hemp in 2015 — a year before hemp cultivation was legalized in the state. The land is dry and blanketed in blond prairie grass. Earlier this summer, this region was declared a natural disaster zone by the U.S. Department of Agriculture due to “exceptional” drought.
Loflin says his hemp grows just fine, and uses half as much water as his other crops. It isn’t clear whether that’s the case for all hemp growers.
Hemp brought Loflin, a fourth-generation farmer, back to the industry at the age of 40. He felt he couldn’t make a living growing traditional commodity crops, like wheat and corn, so he began a career in construction.
“The profitability is tough for a small-time farmer. Really, if you’re not farming multiple thousands of acres, it’s hard,” he said.
When Colorado voters passed Amendment 64 that legalized marijuana and hemp on state level, Loflin saw opportunity. And it’s been an increasingly lucrative one.
The plant itself is worth very little, but Loflin said hemp flowers can sell far as much as $100 a pound. No other crop is fetching such a price, he said, joking, except “opium maybe.”
This season, Loflin will grow 280 acres of hemp. The flowers will be harvested to make CBD oil, or cannabidiol: a tincture that’s become increasingly popular for its medical properties, though the efficacy has been debated.