Meet the Small Country Betting Big
on the Future of Hemp 02 October 2014 - Meet the Small Country Betting Big on the Future of Hemp Slovenia might choose cannabis crops
over GMO monoculture, heading up a global renaissance. By Doug Fine
More even than the arrival of the
local polka band dressed in medieval peasant garb, it was the emergence of the
scythes—blades attached to eight-foot wooden poles in the Slovenian
village of Trimlini, that told me I was in the middle
of a tradition longstanding enough to predate recorded history: a Balkan hemp harvest
celebration. Though the official
modern hemp industry is only 10 years old in Slovenia, everyone in this village
seemed to know his or her part in this ritual. Many knew how to efficiently
harvest the plant anthropologists call a Òcamp followerÓ—seeds we humans
carried around with us when we were still nomadic. In fairness, our American
hemp prohibition is only just now ending after 77 years.
This harvest experience was
something of an extra-credit exercise following day three of the World Hemp Congress,
a fast-growing event based for three years running out of a local high school
campus. With the dayÕs lectures and workshops completed, all hundred or so
Congress attendees, plus a couple of dozen locals, were suddenly swaying or
outright spinning to the European soul music being brought forth by accordion,
washboard and kazoo. Even the 12-foot-high hemp plants all around us seemed to
be part of the dance.
I was spun to the periphery of
the field-side jam, where I found myself sandwiched between an Italian hemp
fiber specialist, a Czech farmer who cultivates 60 acres of hemp flowers for
the high-end beauty care market, and a medicinal cannabinoid
purveyor from Luxembourg (also a former police commissioner of that country).
This last fellow, Nicolas R. Wagener, was munching on a piece of pereci bread (a braided straight pretzel) and sipping a
Riesling that was grown, aged and bottled a few villages away. It was clear that the people who
cultivated the 25 acres of hemp encircling the loose mass of dancers understood
the harvest festival. This wasnÕt a show. It was a
(slightly) updated version of a pre-Christian ritual, a once-common feature of
the human calendar: giving thanks for the productiveness of the soil. ItÕs been
this way since before the Slavs meandered into this tiny mountainous paradise
wedged between Italy, Austria, Croatia and Hungary in the 7th century and
decided to look no further.
Not a single engine was running.
That wasnÕt the case a week later and 600 miles north, where the massive combines
of HollandÕs Hemp Flax company simultaneously
processed thousands of acres for flowers and fiber. But then thereÕs no one
mode of hemp that fits every region. With its broad palette of fiber, seed and
energy applications, hemp provides a wide agronomic tent that works from
cottage industry to big ag. The revived North American hemp
industry, led by Canada, will surpass $1 billion in earnings this year, ItÕs a new industry (this is season 16), with new, huge
harvesting equipment, new processors and new entrepreneurs, and it's growing
24% in cultivated acreage annually. The owner of one of CanadaÕs largest hemp
oil processors, Shaun Crew, told me he doesnÕt even deal with farmers who
cultivate fewer than 1,000 acres.
As I danced near the field on
August 26, the harvest mode was old school—10,000 years old. The noise
involved in a modern agricultural harvest—the combines and balers, the
decorticators that strip the plantÕs fiber from its bark—would not
interrupt this scene because every one of the several hundred thousand hemp
plants towering over the field were about to be harvested by hand.
Representatives of the newest and oldest components of Slovenian rural life
were in the same place, and the cannabis plant brought them together.
Hemp vs. Corporate Corn
Between tunes, the hemp fieldÕs
actual farmer, Igor Kulcar (also the district schoolÕs
tech teacher), offered me one of those terrifying, be-hooked scythes. I donÕt
speak the local Prekmurski dialect of this eponymous
far Eastern Slovene region abutting the Hungarian border, but KulcarÕs face said unmistakably, ÒSo, youÕre a hemp
journalist. Wanna learn how to be a hemp farmer?Ó I did. In fact, itÕs why I was
here: to document the beginning of a battle for ascension between hemp and
creeping corporate corn. Since the latter has high soil demand yet garners the
same European Union $950 per acre subsidy here that soil-building hemp does,
World Hemp Congress organizers believe Slovenia is waging one of the planetÕs
frontline battles for the future direction of humanityÕs food, industrial and
energy supply.
Both hemp and big corn have
powerful advocates in Slovenia. This, of course, is the case in so many places
at this moment in history. And itÕs an important issue to resolve. Are we going
to feed ourselves, our power plants and our economies care of a plant that
allows long-term repetition, or the one the board of Monsanto, or one of its
successors, prefers us to choose? Since this tension exists in my own New
Mexico backyard as well, I told Kulcar I was ready
for my freshman class in reaping fiber hemp. In North America, the Canadians
have been harvesting almost exclusively for seed oil and the protein-rich Òhemp
heartsÓ that remain after oil pressing. Meanwhile, we Americans—once the
world leader in hemp production—are now back at the drawing board when it
comes to hemp.
The strength of the fibers
resisting my blade provided field evidence of what IÕd been hearing on the
processing side of the hemp industry during my five years of research into the
plant: Because of the fiber durability humans have been breeding into hemp for
10 millennia, the plant outperforms synthetic fibers in applications ranging
from plastics to supercapacitor batteries to building
insulation. Biologist Simon
Potter, project innovation manager at a Canadian industrial research facility
called the Composites Innovation Center, says of hemp fiber performance versus
chemical-and-petro-plastics: ÒI donÕt understand, institutionally, how we
forgot about this plant.Ó
And thatÕs just based on
performance, including in the entirely hemp fiber tractor body that PotterÕs
team now has in the field-testing phase. The lower energy needs and fewer toxic
inputs are bonuses. ÒIndustry will be returning to these fibers on a large
scale,Ó Potter told me when we toured his facility last year. ÒWe donÕt have a
choice.Ó Thus, the future of
industry starts in the soil. It thrilled me to think that some of the bast (long) fibers in the stalks I was now tugging in a
tangled, overflowing armful toward a giant pile near a maple tree could go into
a Mercedes door panel, a 3D printer, or the soundproof walls of a server
factory. I mean, this was just a plant. A giant-stalked weed. When you factor per-acre yield, itÕs
no pipe dream to say it can—Potter believes it must and will—replace
todayÕs fossil-based economy.
Natural
fibers taking over industrial production while healing soil and providing
healthy food and sustainable energy through biomass waste? This reality on the ground, so recently a dream of
people in tie-dyes and lava lamps but today endorsed by KentuckyÕs most
conservative politicians, had my forecast for my childrenÕs planet looking
brighter than it had since my ranchÕs creek stopped flowing seven years ago due
to what my old-timer neighbor called Òstranger rain patterns than IÕve ever seen.ÓThe Slovenians are in the same boat, as we are all
are: they arenÕt nurturing their hemp history to prove a point,
theyÕre trying to develop an economy. TheyÕre trying to survive.
Planting Seeds The seeds for the hemp crop I was
mangling, Kulcar told me, were of the traditional
regional Tiborsz‡ll‡si cultivar. ÒI got them at a
Hungarian market just across the border,Ó he said. I could almost hear 60,000
American farmers groaning with envy.
Besides not knowing how to cultivate and harvest hemp, another factor
the fledgling U.S. hemp industry is dealing with this season is a worldwide
seed shortage. The shortage is exacerbated by a domestic drug enforcement M.O.
that has been slow to accept changes in federal law that allow hemp cultivation
for research purposes.While Kulcar and I posed together for a photo, I learned this
specific fieldÕs backstory. In my view, it says as
much about hempÕs famous soil healing qualities as a dozen confirming
university studies: Kulcar said that the land was
lying fallow for the season (an important rotational phase oft-neglected in
modern monoculture). So, ÒI just tossed the hemp in because the soil needed
some work and I knew the Hemp Congress was coming, so weÕd have a plot near the
road to harvest.Ó
Just 61 days later, the hemp
crop, with its foot-long taproots whose very architecture provides erosion
control and soil aeration essential to nutrient building, was twice my height
and ready to harvest for the seed, the aforementioned long bast
fiber, and the short hurd. This last is the key
ingredient for the in-vogue, hemp-based building insulation known as hempcrete: mixed with lime or other natural binder, hempcrete outperforms fiberglass insulation.
Beyond Fast-Food Culture I
bought some hemp-and-clay toothpaste from a local entrepreneur named Vinko Škraban, whose company
is called Planet Konople (ÒKonopleÓ
is Slovenian for ÒhempÓ). ÒHemp is an industry with both a past and a future
here,Ó the 36-year-old told me. ÒBut weÕre just getting started as an
independent nation with a modern industry. Every year more farmers see the
writing on the wall and want to get on board the hemp train.Ó
That such a view might be allowed
to prevail is a loud statement that the hugely impactful GMO monoculture era
might prove to be brief. If only U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack (who is a friend to hemp), would make such a
statement. In the States we still, insanely, have federal tax dollars going to
wild hemp field eradication and seed import seizure.
SloveniaÕs choice comes at a time
of lively debate about future healthy food systems. GMO monoculture
near-ubiquity is being widely questioned the world over as a basic model. EveryoneÕs aware of GMOs
in Slovenia, because nearly everyone, by default, is connected to the land.
Many families make their own wine (more than one matriarch pushed a glass into
my hands the moment I stepped onto her porch). Slovenia is ahead of the curve
in hemp for a reason besides tradition and field-tested functionality. The
place has the frontier populationÕs fiercely independent spirit: the local Radewski sparkling water company, for instance, recently
turned down a buy-out offer from Coca-Cola. You see this kind of thing in cultures that for one reason
or another got left alone in the 20th century. I noticed a similarly clear
statement in Mendocino County, CaliforniaÕs 2004 banning of genetically
modified crops (the first county in the U.S. to do so). Ten years later, the
entire state of Vermont has followed suit.
A
'Ninth Inning Comeback' for Small Family Farmers? But
thereÕs another side to entering the Digital Age with the blessing of a rural,
independent, locavore mindset and economy. Ten years
after Slovenia joined the European Union in 2004, the population of two million
is facing 13% unemployment, largely because farming hasnÕt been making young
folks a living, until now.
Not just hempÕs friendly subsidy
incentive, but the exponential value added provided by the plantÕs finished
products—as evidenced by the dozen hemp-related booths already hawking
hemp flour, oil (as food and wood sealant) and soaps at that huge AGRA farm
fair here —has agronomists in Slovenia singing a strikingly similar tune
to the ones IÕve been hearing stateside. The theme is Òninth inning comeback
for small farmers.Ó
Indeed itÕs no accident that this
year's AGRA fair for the first time partnered with the overlapping World Hemp
Congress that had brought me to the country. At the highest levels, officialdom
in Slovenia has begun to embrace the idea that industrial cannabis can finally
help the nation emerge from the tornado of inflationary economic uncertainty in
which itÕs been reeling since joining the EU. Hemp is still a niche industry here, with Slovenia having to
relearn how to market the plant just like the rest of the world is relearning.
Its decade-long head start over the U.S., though, is significant: thatÕs 10
harvests, totaling 1,400 acres this year.
ÒValue-added products are where the moneyÕs at,Ó Planet KonopleÕs Škraban told me.
HeÕs almost certainly right. In
Manitoba, Canada, I met another hemp businesswoman, 37-year-old Colleen Dyck, a triathlete and mother of
five who uses her familyÕs 60-acre hemp harvest as an ingredient in the Gorp Energy Bars she markets nationwide. ÒYou increase your hemp oilÕs value a
hundred times the moment you stick it in a bottle and call it shampoo,Ó
Canadian oil processor Crew concurred. On the cultivation side, as well, hemp
is changing the playbook for farmers on both shores of the Atlantic. At least
once a week I hear from someone in the American heartland, and the message is
always the same: ÒWe havenÕt farmed our 40/400/4000 acres since the Ô90s
because we didnÕt want to be part of the chemical corn cycle, but are you
serious about the hemp seed oil profits the Canadians are making? Because if so
we might just get back at it.Ó
Hemp is returning family farmers
to the land. Hallelujah. And this before the arrival of full federal commercial
legalization of hemp cultivation in the U.S., which could come this Congress
via a Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR)-sponsored piece of legislation: Senate Bill
S359, the Industrial Hemp Farming Act. Its passage is vital for allowing the
U.S. economy to benefit from hempÕs lightning fast resurgence.
Hemp Diplomacy Slovenian hempsters
have history on their side: the former Yugoslavia was the worldÕs second
largest hemp producer after WWII. However, for Slovenian Agriculture Ministry
honchos to claim hemp is a major regional crop in 2014 would be like a U.S.
Commerce Secretary declaring the Digital Economy to be the nationÕs future
industrial backbone on the day WozÕs first Apple
appeared at a trade show in 1976: such a statement would be correct, but a bit
premature for all but the most prescient politician to declare.
Plus, thereÕs always an old
guard; in this case corn and seed companies married to the GMO cycle. All over
the world the hemp narrative is similar: some batch of brave, usually
politically well-connected pioneers decide to bring one of our longest-utilized
plants back immediately, whether government regulators or the established
agricultural mode is ready or not. In the tiny, conservative Eastern Colorado
town of Springfield last year, 40-year-old father of three Ryan Loflin—benefitting from a decade of legislative work
by a small core of hempsters like Lynda Parker, Jason
Lauve and Michael Bowman—planted 60 acres of
essentially smuggled hemp seed in order to prove that the crop took half the
water that the failing local wheat crop demanded. Colorado is thus a year ahead in its efforts (which include
rebuilding the lost U.S. seed stock) to bring back the American hemp industry.
This year, ahead of federal law, commercial hemp farmers in the Rocky Mountain
State have 1,600 acres in the ground with state permits. That number is
expected to grow significantly with increased seed availability.
Real world markets are paying
attention to hemp. ThatÕs thanks to high seed oil prices in Canada, awareness
of hemp fiberÕs performance in European industry, and the fact that hemp
provides a petroleum alternative. Not just at the pump, but for plastics and
other Digital Age industrial applications—even at power plants. Hemp
Flax, the Dutch Company with the impressive combines and one of EuropeÕs major
fiber processors, has just expanded into Romania, and will be adding seed oil
to its markets. Cumulatively, the
cannabis plantÕs return to humanity is the front end of a much-needed
sustainable industrial revival thatÕs just getting started and isnÕt going
away. Doug Fine is a comedic
investigative journalist, solar-powered goat herder and bestselling author of
Farewell, My Subaru, Too High to Fail, and, most recently, Hemp Bound, which
provides a model for a locavore, post-prohibition
hemp economy. Books and films: Dougfine.com Twitter: @organiccowboy