Will Hemp Save the World, Before the Government Kills It?

There is a great line in the wonderful film Charlie Wilson’s War, where Charlie Wilson (played remarkably by the inimitable Tom Hanks) describes the successful, if relatively covert, involvement of the United States government in the Soviet-Afghan War: “These things happened. They were glorious and they changed the world… and then we f***d up the endgame.”

With the next Farm Bill somewhere on the horizon, I believe we are approaching a similar moment for the future of hemp. I believe the future of hemp is glorious and that it can change the world. What will we do to the endgame?

This is an analysis about the current state of hemp and whether that industry will revolutionize the world before the government relegates it back to the ash heap of history. It just so happens to dovetail with my personal experience representing clients in connection with the hemp business.

In the Beginning…

Back in the “stone age” (circa 2017) when I decided I wanted to be a cannabis lawyer, I began with a focus on hemp. [As a brief aside, telling people in Alabama you practice cannabis law in 2017 must have been what Noah felt like when he was telling people it was about to start raining.]

The 2014 Farm Bill, which for the first time legalized “industrial hemp” as distinct from marijuana under the Controlled Substances Act and allowed state agricultural departments and universities to license the production of hemp, cracked the door for a nascent and limited hemp market, and it was a remarkable time to advise new hemp operators and investors about how to maximize this opportunity within the contours of the law.

At the same time, I was regularly receiving calls from existing clients, colleagues within the firm, and strangers about how their non-cannabis companies should conduct themselves when approached by hemp companies who wanted to do business with them. The latter category included banks, insurance companies, real estate companies, and myriad companies who had questions about how their employees’ use of hemp interplayed with the companies’ existing drug testing policies. Most of the time the companies were reluctant to have anything to do with hemp, but the conversations were interesting, and it was clear that most companies realized the landscape was changing. It was the Wild West, and I was having a ball.

Rocket Fuel

Enter the 2018 Farm Bill and the explosion of the hemp industry. The 2018 Farm Bill dropped the word “industrial” and defined “hemp” as:

the plant Cannabis sativa L. and any part of that plant, including the seeds thereof and all derivatives, extracts, cannabinoids, isomers, acids, salts, and salts of isomers, whether growing or not, with a delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol concentration of not more than 0.3 percent on a dry weight basis.

In addition to removing the limitations from the 2014 Farm Bill licensing, the 2018 Farm Bill also moved oversight authority from the Department of Justice and DEA to the USDA and FDA.

The 2018 Farm Bill was a tectonic shift, and we recognized the new regime’s potential almost immediately, predicting the following:

  • Increased “smart” money and research. Because hemp has been a Schedule I substance along with marijuana for decades, many sophisticated sources of funding have abstained from financing the industry. This placed hemp at a competitive disadvantage to other commodities and prevented hemp from reaching its full potential. Now that hemp can be manufactured and sold without substantial legal risks, look for the money to flow toward this underserved sector. Publicly traded companies, private equity firms, venture capitalists and other investment groups will all take significant stakes in both the manufacturing and selling of hemp and hemp-derived products. In addition to traditional commercial development efforts, much of this cash is likely to be spent to hire top researchers to develop proprietary strands of hemp to meet a range of product applications and to take steps to protect the resulting intellectual property.
  • Explosion of hemp and hemp-derived products. Fueled in large part by this injection of financing from sophisticated investors, there is likely to be an explosion in the ways that hemp is used. Hemp already has hundreds — if not thousands — of known uses, and that number should grow substantially once the industry is exposed to the market forces that come with smart money and increased research. The biggest winner may be the hemp-derived CBD business. Hemp-derived CBD is a compound believed to have significant therapeutic benefits without an appreciable psychoactive component. The Washington Post has reported that “dozens of studies have found evidence that [CBD] can treat epilepsy as well as a range of other illnesses, including anxiety, schizophrenia, heart disease, and cancer.” One industry analysis predicts that the hemp-CBD market alone could hit $22 billion by 2022. The health and wellness sector should see particular hemp-related activity and growth in the coming years.
  • Increased ancillary services provided to hemp-related businesses. Because hemp has been included within the definition of marijuana under federal law for decades, most banks, law firms and other service providers have avoided providing services to hemp businesses to avoid the risk of charges of money laundering or conspiring to violate state and federal drug laws. The absence of such service providers has fostered a great deal of uncertainty in an area where certainty and clarity have been sorely needed. With hemp’s new legal status, look for professional service providers to enter the market in 2019 and beyond. Of course, entities looking to provide services to hemp-related businesses should take adequate precautions to ensure those businesses are only producing federally legal hemp.
  • Consolidation and integration. An interesting phenomenon in “legal” marijuana states has been the rapid consolidation and integration of marijuana growers, processors and dispensaries. Some states have mandated vertical integration (e.g., the growers are the sellers) through regulation. And a number of large cannabis companies have acquired grow operations or multi-unit dispensaries rather than establish a cannabis presence in a state from scratch. The hemp industry is likely to follow a similar path, both through government regulation and because larger companies are likely to seek to obtain sufficient quantities of hemp through consolidation and vertical integration. Accordingly, attorneys and investors should anticipate significant merger and acquisition activity in the coming years.
  • Federal regulations and state regimes. The 2018 Farm Bill does not create an entirely unregulated playing field for hemp. Over the coming months, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and Food and Drug Administration will issue regulations implementing the 2018 Farm Bill. State governments will also unveil plans governing the testing, labeling and marketing of hemp-related products, as well as the licensing and monitoring of hemp-related businesses.

I’m proud to say that we were pretty much on the money with these projections, and countless studies and data confirm that hemp can be a viable product with countless form factors that help shape the global economy.

That is when I realized that I might be able to make a career as a cannabis lawyer.

The Good with the Bad

Of course, the development of the hemp industry has not been without controversy – in fact it may be the controversy that has spurred much of the development.

I would be lying to you if I told you that every hemp or hemp-derived product was designed with the best of intentions or contained appropriate mechanisms to ensure consumer safety. There are certainly hemp-derived products on the market that have not been subjected to sufficient product development and testing, and that are being marketed in ways that rightfully should concern policymakers and the public. Novel, psychoactive cannabinoids that fall within the bounds of the terms, if perhaps not the spirit, of the Farm Bill fill the shelves of stores around the country with little to no mechanisms for enforcement. That should change, and Americans should have confidence that the products made available to them are safe and effective.

In response to this proliferation, a number of states have enacted rules and regulations restricting the production and sale of certain hemp-derived cannabinoids. A number of those rules – for example, age and purity restrictions for psychoactive cannabinoids – seem well-intentioned, and we expect to see more of those unless and until the federal government takes further action.

On occasion, however, it appears that the motivations of policymakers may be less pure. It is no secret amongst those in the cannabis industry that marijuana licensees in states that have legalized marijuana are no fans of the unregulated hemp-derived psychoactive industry. After all, marijuana companies are subject to astronomical taxes and endure regulatory costs that make turning a profit far more difficult than if they were able to offer a product that offered a somewhat similar “high” without the institutional overhead and headwinds. Florida may be the clearest and most recent example. With adult-use marijuana widely expected to become law in Florida soon, the state legislature recently passed a law largely prohibiting delta-8 and delta-10.

On the other hand, it would be wrong, even lazy, to suggest that the development of hemp-based products has been without substantial benefits to society as a whole. Entrepreneurs are developing hemp-based substitutes for any number of the most common products used around the globe, meaning that the addressable market for hemp is everyone on earth and beyond.

A younger version of me once wrote, in comparing the addressable market for marijuana to that of hemp:

Hemp, on the other hand, has the potential to dwarf marijuana in the global market. Unlike its sister plant, hemp has the capacity to replace products we use every day without us even realizing it. For example, hemp can provide a substitute for concrete, plastic, fuel, automotive parts, clothes, etc. These are products nearly all consumers need but they neither realize nor care what the products are made of, as long as they work. In that way, while the market for marijuana is limited to consumers looking to purchase marijuana, the market for hemp includes anyone who purchases products that can be manufactured by hemp. In part for these reasons, experts predict four to five times growth in the industrial hemp market in the next five years.

I stand by those words. I am convinced that hemp can change the world.

But I am equally convinced that local, state, and federal governments can, without the appropriate consideration for hemp’s benefits, relegate the plant back to its prohibition era status and deny the world its many benefits. The policy choices made by state governments, and perhaps most importantly by the federal government during the next Farm Bill, could fundamentally alter the future of hemp. Will it be a soon-forgotten shooting star that dazzled the world for a decade and then burned out, or will we look back at the past decade as the renaissance of one of civilization’s oldest and most versatile plants?

Conclusion

I’ll end where I began because Philip Seymour Hoffman’s work is revered by the Budding Trends community (and anyone with taste), and because the film’s ominous conclusion is a message for anyone who wants to see the hemp industry thrive in the years ahead.

As Hanks’ character celebrates the Afghan defeat of the Soviets, the hardened CIA analyst played by Hoffman offers this parable:

On his sixteenth birthday the boy gets a horse as a present. All of the people in the village say, “Oh, how wonderful!”

The Zen master says, “We’ll see.”

One day, the boy is riding and gets thrown off the horse and hurts his leg. He’s no longer able to walk, so all of the villagers say, “How terrible!”

The Zen master says, “We’ll see.”

Some time passes and the village goes to war. All of the other young men get sent off to fight, but this boy can’t fight because his leg is messed up. All of the villagers say, “How wonderful!”

The Zen master says, “We’ll see.”

The message behind this story is pretty clear. We’re prone to jump to conclusions about whether something is “good” or “bad.” We are especially quick to label something as “bad.” The reality is that things can be either good or bad, both good and bad, or neither. When it comes to whether Congress and the states will recognize hemp’s great potential, I guess we’ll see.

Congress Fails to Advance Federal Farm Bill or Disaster Assistance Bill

The National Law Review recently featured an article, Congress Fails to Advance Federal Farm Bill or Disaster Assistance Bill, by Laura L. Riske of Michael Best & Friedrich LLP:

 

Every five years, Congress takes up the Farm Bill which covers food and agriculture policy under the purview of the United States Department of Agriculture.  The current 2008 Farm Bill’s financial support programs are set to expire on September 30, 2012 unless they are re-authorized by Congress.  In recent weeks, passage of a new Farm Bill received extensive attention given both the expiration date and record drought conditions that have plagued the U.S. agriculture industry. Recently, more than half the nation’s counties had federal disaster designations that included most in Wisconsin largely because of the drought.  Unfortunately, neither the expiration deadline nor the severe drought conditions stopped the ongoing partisan gridlock in Washington, and Congress departed for a five-week August recess without having taken the critical votes needed to pass either a new comprehensive compromise farm support bill or a limited disaster assistance relief bill.  This article provides an overview of the legislative action that took place prior to the August recess on three key House and Senate bills including:

•  H.R. 6083 – Federal Agriculture Reform and Risk Management Act of 2012 (“FARRM Bill”);

http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/BILLS-112hr6083ih/pdf/BILLS-112hr6083ih.pdf;

•  H.R. 6233 – Agricultural Disaster Assistance Act of 2012 (“ADA Bill”);

http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/BILLS-112hr6233eh/pdf/BILLS-112hr6233eh.pdf

•  S. 3240 – Agriculture Reform, Food & Jobs Act of 2012 (“ARFJ Bill”); and

http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/BILLS-112s3240pp/pdf/BILLS-112s3240pp.pdf

it provides an update on the outcome of the summer recess and September negotiations.

On July 12, 2012, the U.S. House Agriculture Committee passed their new comprehensive bipartisan five-year FARRM Bill. The cost of the Committee’s FARRM Bill was $491 billion and contained $36.5 billion in savings over 10 years through program cuts and reductions that included $14 billion in cuts to the commodity title, $6 billion in cuts to the conservation title and $16.5 billion in cuts to the nutrition title.  The FARRM Bill eliminated highly criticized direct payments and replaced it with new price and revenue support programs, restored the expired disaster relief program, and cut $16.5 billion from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Programs (“SNAP”) or food stamps.

In the House at large, Republican farm state lawmakers and some Democrats criticized the Committee FARRM Bill and indicated the impact of enormous program changes and cuts would be disastrous to those most in need, while some Republican conservatives objected to the high cost and questioned whether the cuts were deep enough.  Given this division, House Republican leaders who control the chamber were reluctant to bring the controversial Committee FARRM Bill to the full floor out of concern it could go down in defeat right before the November elections. Instead, House Republican leadership maneuvered to quell criticism of the stalemate and turned to consider either quick passage of a one-year extension of the 2008 Farm Bill, or a simple stand-alone disaster relief bill.

On July 31, 2012, with resistance from many conservative Republicans over a one year renewal of the current 2008 Farm Bill, and after several Democrats announced their opposition to this measure, House Republican leaders dropped the renewal plan and instead pressed for immediate short-term disaster assistance for drought-stricken farmers and ranchers. House Agriculture Committee Chairman Frank Lucas encouraged his colleagues to support the ADA Bill saying, “My priority remains to get a long-term five-year farm bill on the books and put those policies in place, but the most pressing business before us is to provide disaster assistance to those impacted by the drought conditions who are currently exposed.”

On August 2, 2012, the Republican controlled House passed their scaled-down short-term $383 million ADA Bill to assist farmers whose livestock losses and feed expenses had increased due to the drought conditions.  The ADA Bill would have continued programs that had already expired, those that indemnify livestock and forage programs, provided some assistance to producers of a handful of other crops, and it would have been paid for through the placement of caps on conservation programs in the current farm law.

In turn, Democrats who control the Senate refused to take up the House ADA Bill before their August recess. The Senate Democratic leaders indicated they preferred the House had taken up their sweeping five-year ARFJ Bill that had passed the full Senate on June 21, 2012 with overwhelming bipartisan support.  Senate Democrat leaders were quick to fault House Republican leaders for failing to consider the broader legislation in time.

The $500 billion Senate ARFJ Bill cut spending by approximately $25 billion over 10 years, including $15 billion in cuts to the commodity title, $6 billion to conservation and $4.5 billion to nutrition programs.  The Senate cuts were achieved primarily by replacing direct payments with an agriculture risk coverage program which protects farmers against losses in revenue, boosting crop insurance, and cutting the SNAP or food stamps.

Senate Democrats said they preferred their ARFJ Bill because it financed dozens of price support and crop insurance programs for farmers and food assistance for low-income families, and it provided more robust drought relief to other agricultural sectors. Senate Democrats also objected to the House Republican’s ADA Bill because it had deeper cuts to food stamps and offset costs through conservation fund cuts.

Moments after the House passed the ADA Bill, Senator Debbie Stabenow, Chairwoman of the Senate Agriculture Committee, took to the Senate floor and said she will work informally with House Agriculture legislators over the August recess to try to put together a new measure to present to Congress.

Although Congressional leaders in both chambers had indicated they would continue to work on the issues surrounding the Farm Bill during the summer recess, big questions remained as to whether or not they could muster the votes needed to pass a bill when Congress returned from recess in September, but it seemed more likely that a vote could be delayed until later in the year given that election season was well underway.  Upon return to Congress in early September, Senate and House officials indicated that compromise negotiations over the summer recess were not fruitful.  Then, on Friday, September 21st Congress left town again without consideration of a farm bill which has left the current farm bill to expire on September 30th.  House Speaker John Boehner indicated they would deal with the farm bill after the November elections because he didn’t believe he had the 218 votes needed to pass either an extension or new legislation.  In response, U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack expressed concerns that Congress would not be able to pass a farm bill in the upcoming lame duck session either.  In short, an unsuccessful lame duck session would mean that the measure would have to wait until a new Congress is sworn in, and the new Congress would have to start over again to develop a new farm bill.

We will continue to monitor and report on substantive developments surrounding the Farm Bill as it progresses through the legislative process.  In the interim, below are links that farmers can use to access drought information and assistance:

•  USDA’s Disaster and Drought Assistance programs

•  University of Wisconsin Cooperative Extension:

– Drought Resources

– Farmer-to-Farmer Hay and Forage Marketplace

– Farmer-to-Farmer Tool for Pasture Rental

•  Wisconsin Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection

•  Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources

© MICHAEL BEST & FRIEDRICH LLP