Industrial hemp is perhaps the only economically and environmentally viable alternative to opium cultivation in Afghanistan. Hemp is a fast growing, legal cash crop that presents a host of immediate benefits to Afghan society, including a potentially lucrative source of foreign exchange earnings.
Hemp can be used to produce heating and cooking fuel, thereby ending the need for people to cut down and burn their remaining forests during severe winters. Using hemp in this way would also help prepare areas of land for future tree planting projects.
It is part of the same family as cannabis, and the leaves of the two are indistinguishable. But there are other benefits to cultivating hemp.
Renewable energy
At the moment many Afghan children are malnourished. Hemp produces a fruit boasting the nutritional qualities of soya, oily fish and wheat combined.
Hemp can produce quantities of wood equivalent to four times that of trees over a similar period of time. This biomass can be used in the production of clean, renewable energy, biodegradable plastics and building composites.
Hemp is currently being grown for these purposes in 36 countries around the world, including Canada and some European Union countries.
If hemp could be successfully introduced in Afghanistan we believe that:
# Those who depend on the 90,000 hectares of land dedicated to opium poppies in Afghanistan would instead be able to cultivate industrial hemp to provide heating, shelter, food and would have an alternative source of revenue
# Communities in the West would no longer be flooded with cheap heroin in this supply-driven industry
# The world would become a cleaner, healthier and more secure place as the need to cut down old growth forests and burn the remaining oil, coal and gas reserves is reduced.
Unique opportunity
Industrial hemp is perhaps the only economically and environmentally viable alternative to opium cultivation in Afghanistan.
It presents an opportunity to satisfy the immediate fuel, fibre and monetary requirements of two million farming households struggling to survive in one of the most dangerous countries on earth.
Hemp cultivation also presents a unique opportunity for environmental improvement in Afghanistan.
Crucially the international community has a moral obligation to prevent a Colombian-style "war on drugs" from taking hold in Afghanistan because if this happens we can be certain the violence, and supply of opium, will never end.
What do you think of Marc Deeley's argument? Could industrial hemp tempt Afghan farmers away from the lucrative cultivation of opium? Would it work? Tell us your thoughts
Story from BBC
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/south_asia/3704878.stm
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I've done some research into hemp. Great product. It should replace wood as our main pulp/paper source.
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Kory Yamashita
"What lies behind us and what lies ahead of us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us." - Oliver Wendell Holmes
Nothing wrong with the hemp fields themselves, but another issue would be that you need aid organizations to distribute seed - and the US will not allow that to occur, as we all know what their feelings are on hemp or any hemp-like substance.
First, the militias need to be brought to heel, then you can work on limited distribution of hemp if you can get it by the US administrators or the Karazi government.
among the militias who would rather see farmers
cultiviating opium poppies than hemp, or heck, what
about non-GMO organic food crops people could eat.
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Dave Ruston
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Dave Ruston