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- From: Ben Masel <bmasel@igc.apc.org>
- Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs
- Date: 08 Feb 94 22:02 PST
- Subject: "AN AMAZING PLANT" 1991 hemp artic
- Message-ID: <1484000469@cdp>
-
- AN AMAZING PLANT
-
- by Bill Leuders
-
- From ISTHMUS, "the weekly newspaper of Madison" Feb 8-14, 1991
-
- Reprinted by permission. Further reprints permitted with credits.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------
-
- There aren't many things upon which long-haired radical Ben Masel,
- state Department of Agriculture official Erwin "Bud" Sholts,
- agronomy researcher Pat LeMahieu and corporate head George Tyson
- can be expected to agree. Among them: kicking puppies is mean,
- Drano should not be taken internally, and hemp - commonly known as
- marijuana - could become a major cash crop for Wisconsin.
-
- According to these and other participants in a, ahem, budding
- scientific discussion, the hemp plant could be cultivated not just
- for such traditional uses as rope and fabric, but also as a
- readily renewable resource for making paper, construction
- materials, high protein food, and safe, clean fuel.
-
- Masel, director of the Wisconsin Chapter of NORML, (the National
- Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws), in 1990 spoke in
- more than 50 US cities on the potential uses of the pot plant.
- Scientific American last December published an item on the nascent
- "grass-roots" movement in support of hemp; Masel was just
- interviewed by the Wall Street Journal for an upcoming article on
- the same.
-
- A primary organizer of Madison's annual "marijuana harvest"
- festival, the oft jailed Masel says his goal is "to relegalize
- this useful plant for its paper, fiber, fuel, food, medical and
- recreational value."
-
- Sholts, director of the state ag department's development and
- diversification program, affirms part of Masel's message: that
- hemp grows well in Wisconsin, even on soil not good for much
- else.
-
- "My father raised it on his farm," Sholts recalls of the time
- during WWII when farmers were encouraged to grow hemp for the war
- effort. (Masel, citing old US Department of Agriculture reports,
- says Wisconsin was once the nations leading producer of hemp, in
- some years accounting for more than half the nation's total
- crop.)
-
- Because hemp grows quickly and has a high per-acre yield, Sholts
- says "It's a very, very prime product for biomass" -organic
- material that can be converted to fuel. Hemp is also seen by
- "people with expertise" as preferable to kenaf, (aka ambry) a warm
- weather fibrous plant, for making paper and other products.
-
- But alas, Sholts points out, hemp has one big problem: With its
- current properties its illegal."
-
- LeMahieu, director of operations for Agrecol, the Agricultural
- research division of Madison-based W. T. Rogers Co., has a
- solution in mind: the development of a strain of hemp that is
- "socially acceptable." In other words, hemp that has been
- genetically engineered to remove the alkaloids that get people
- high.
-
- "It's feasible," insists LeMahieu, formerly a leading agricultural
- researcher at the UW-Madison. "Any trait can be bred out of a
- plant with recombinant DNA." Engineering a strain of hemp with the
- desired traits for mass cultivation will require "massive amounts"
- of money and commitment, says LeMahieu, who thinks Wisconsin-
- which has "the top plant-genetics research groups in the nation,
- maybe in the world" - is ideally suited for the task.
-
- "It truly is an amazing plant" says LeMahieu of hemp. "If you look
- at all the possible products that could be made from the hemp
- plant, it makes you wonder why we haven't pursued this."
-
- Tyson, chairman of the board of Xylan Inc., a biomass research
- firm in the University Research park, takes the point beyond
- wonder to rage. "We have the technology now to convert biomass
- into the fuel we're fighting for in the Persian Gulf," he says,
- asserting that the United States could eliminate its dependence on
- foreign oil simply by growing high-biomass crops like hemp on the
- acreage it now pays farmers to keep fallow.
-
- "It just seems silly to be paying farmers $26 billion a year not
- to produce something that would replace something that we are
- importing at the cost of over $100 billion a year.
-
- "This," Tyson asserts, "is a national disgrace."
-
- GRASS ROOTS
-
- Throughout most of U.S. -and indeed human- history, hemp has been
- domestically cultivated for a variety of uses, including textiles,
- rope, and paper. George Washington and Thomas Jefferson grew hemp
- on their farms; the rigging and sails of the U.S. Constitution
- were all made from hemp (some 60 tons worth; Betsy Ross used hemp
- cloth to make the first U.S. flag; hemp canvas (the word "canvass"
- comes from cannabis, Latin for hemp) covered the pioneers' wagons
- and prairie schooners; Abraham Lincoln used a hemp-oil lamp to
- study law.
-
- Hemp was also used to make fine linen and underwear. Masel has a
- friend in Hungary [actually Germany] who still uses his family's
- hemp tablecloth - made in 1820. According to Jack Herer's pro-hemp
- manifesto, The Emperor Wears No New Clothes, the word "towel"
- comes from its original material-hemp tow, a silk-like textile
- professedly four times as absorbent as cotton.
-
- There is little historical record of people smoking hemp grown for
- rope or fabric. Masel, who testified as a marijuana expert in a
- 1988 court case, says plants used for such purposes would be
- harvest before flowering, and thus be more likely to cause
- headaches than highs, Still, some hemp grown for seed was smoked
- for its psychoactive and medicinal properties-a use no one seemed
- too bothered by until the plant became a threat to U.S.
- petrochemical companies.
-
- As outlined in Herer's history of hemp, super-efficient fiber-
- stripping machines invented in the in the 1930s promised to do for
- hemp what the cotton gin did for cotton, Corporations like Du Pont
- and industrialists like William Randolph Hearst feared hemp would
- compete with their pulpwood paper and synthetic products.
-
- The Hearst chain of newspapers declared hemp and other drugs
- Public Enemy No.1. Hemp, renamed "marihuana,." was blamed for
- crime and car accidents and linked to black jazz musicians and
- Mexican revolutionaries. "Marihuana makes fiends of boys in 30
- days," screamed the headlines of one Hearst story, which claimed
- that hemp "goads users to blood lust."
-
- Du Pont, which had just patented a new process for making pulpwood
- paper and was at work on a petroleum-based synthetic it later
- named nylon, behaved similarly. Banker Andrew Mellon, Du Pont's
- chief financial backer and President Herbert Hoover's Secretary of
- the Treasury, tapped his nephew-to-be, Harry Anslinger, to head
- the newly formed Federal Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs.
- Anslinger, backed by the Hearst papers, crusaded for pot
- prohibition. (Among his favorite slogans, "If the hideous monster
- Frankenstein came face to face with the monster marihuana, he
- would drop dead of fright.") Such efforts resulted in the
- "Marihuana Tax Act of 1937"-the apparent death knell of legal
- hemp.
-
- As it happened, however, the government was unable to keep a good
- weed down. Hemp was still needed for a variety of uses, especially
- naval ones (hemp being the only natural fiber that can withstand
- saltwater for long). When World War II began and Japan blocked
- U.S. imports of Indian hemp, the government called on the
- nation's "patriotic farmers" to resume growing the monster
- marihuana.
-
- A 1942 U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) film entitled "Hemp
- for Victory" evoked hemp's historical usefulness ("For the sailor,
- no less than the hangman hemp was indispensable,"), noting that
- the plant - "now little known outside of Kentucky and Wisconsin"
- was sorely needed for war items ranging from tow lines to the
- webbing of parachutes.
-
- "In 1942, 14,00 acres of fiber hemp were harvested in the United
- States," the narrator proclaimed amid strains of patriotic music.
- "The goal for 1943 is 300,000 acres. "The film also touted hemp's
- agronomical virtues: "A dense and shady crop, hemp tends to choke
- out weeds. Here's a Canada Thistle that couldn't stand the
- competition, dead as a dodo. Thus hemp leaves the ground in good
- condition for the following crop."
-
- When Asian markets reopened after the war, domestic hemp
- production again came to a halt. Well, sort of: State agriculture
- official Sholts notes that, as a result of its erstwhile
- cultivation, hemp still grows wild over much of Wisconsin
- - including on his father's farm, 11 miles south of Madison.
-
- Observes Sholts, "It's a very prolific plant."
-
- At this point, no one knows just how prolific or useful hemp may
- be-because, unlike such crops as corn, hemp has not benefited from
- modern agricultural techniques, including plant genetics.
-
- Although Agrecol (the company's name, like its mission, blends
- agriculture and ecology) has had impressive results test-planting
- kenaf, division head LeMahieu says hemp has higher-quality fiber,
- more potential uses, the ability to withstand cold better, and
- possibly higher yields: "If it weren't for the alkaloids
- [psychoactive ingredients] in hemp, we wouldn't even be talking
- about kenaf."
-
- Masel, who last September garnered 11,230 votes in a pro-hemp
- Primary challenge to Gov. Tommy Thompson, is especially fired up
- about the potential as a renewable source of paper and other
- products traditionally made from wood. One advantage of hemp over
- trees, says Masel, is that it contains significantly less lignin,
- a natural adhesive whose content must be lowered in the
- papermaking process.
-
- Roger Faulkner, a UW research specialist who works at the U.S.
- Forest Service's Forest Products Lab in Madison, adds that annual
- growth plants including hemp generate four to five times as much
- biomass yearly as trees. The disadvantage is that trees can be cut
- and stored until needed, but annuals not immediately processed or
- properly warehoused will degenerate. A "polymer scientist,"
- Faulkner is part of a team of Forest Products Lab researchers
- studying the feasibility of using high-fiber plants to make
- "structural components." Within the last year, the group has made
- high-density construction boards using both kenaf and hemp-the
- latter from "ditch weed" (low-grade wild marijuana) that Tyson
- brought in. By blending plant fibers and polymers - compounds of
- high molecular weight - Faulkner thinks the same techniques can be
- used to make hemp and kenaf auto-body parts. (Hemp is already
- being used in some wallboard made in Germany.)
-
- "I don't think there's any doubt that hemp's one of the best fiber
- crops there is," says Faulkner, "Certainly, it's the best-adapted
- plant for Wisconsin."
-
- Faulkner further laments that both the Forest Service and private
- industry seem more interested in timber than annual-growth plants
- - although the USDA is funding a mill in Texas that will make
- paper from kenaf. Cultivating fiber on farms, he argues, is
- ecologically preferable to growing "monocultural" forests for
- pulp. What's more, it would allow fallow farmland to be put to
- use without adding to surpluses of existing crops.
-
- Another potentially useful hemp product is seed, which can account
- for 50% of the weight of plants grown for this purpose. Hemp seed,
- Says Masel, is about 16% protein and contains eight amino acids,
- compared with just four in soybeans. Masel has made cake from
- imported hemp seeds (legal if sterilized to make them "incapable
- of germination") and envisions their use as a high-protein food or
- animal feed. (In China, hemp-cake was used to feed animals for
- centuries.)
-
- Hemp-seed oil, at least 35% of seed content by weight, can be used
- as a lubricant (as it was in World War II fighter-plane engines),
- a cooking and salad oil, or even as a diesel fuel. Gatewood
- Galbraith, a Democrat running for governor of Kentucky on a
- pro-pot platform, last fall campaigned with singer Willie Nelson
- from Lexington to Louisville in a diesel Mercedes powered with 25%
- hemp-seed oil. The engine, says Masel, would have run on straight
- hemp-seed, but Galbraith didn't have a big enough supply.
-
- Masel, who sells $35 dollar hemp T-shirts and $10.00 hemp product
- sampler kits through an outfit called Wisconsin Hemp Products Inc.
- (P.O. Box 3481, Madison 53704), also thinks the hemp plant's
- "Styrofoam-like stalk" could be used as an insulator, or to make
- biodegradable fast-food clamshells. Can Masel see the day when
- McDonald's sells hamburgers in containers made from hemp? "I can
- see the day when they will be paying me royalties on the patent."
-
- HARVESTING THE SUN
-
- Perhaps the most exciting us of hemp is as biomass fuel. Through
- process called pyrolysis-the application of intense heat in the
- absence of air-hemp and other organic material can be efficiently
- converted to charcoal, oil, gas, or methanol.
-
- Hemp is a favored crop for biomass-organic material-because it
- grows very rapidly in a variety of climates. Indeed hemp has been
- called "the world's champion photosynthesizer," capable of
- converting energy from the sun more readily than any other plant.
-
- Biomass boosters further claim that pyrolytic fuels would be good
- for the environment. Pyrolysis charcoal, said to have the same
- heating value as coal, is virtually sulfur-free, unlike coal or
- other fossil fuels, a key cause of acid rain. What's more, hemp
- and other high-growth plants produce beneficial oxygen when grown-
- and take in carbon dioxide from the atmosphere equal to the amount
- they release when burned. Thus, hemp hounds assert, if biomass
- replaces fossil fuels, the amount of acid rain and smog will be
- reduced and the trend toward global warming - the so-called
- greenhouse effect - will have a chance to reverse.
-
- "We're fighting in the Middle East for the right to pollute
- ourselves," hemp guru Herer told Al Giordano of Massachusetts'
- Valley Advocate newspaper. "We have a plant that can win a war. We
- have a plant here that can save the planet."
-
- James Converse, chairman of the Department of Agricultural
- Engineering at the UW-Madison, says university researchers hav
- done some work converting biomass material - corn, primarily - to
- ethanol. But he thinks the day when it makes sense to talk about
- biomass fuels replacing fossil fuels is a long way off: "Biomass
- will hold possibilities only when the price of fuel or the
- availability of fuel becomes such that you can make a profit with
- [biomass.]
-
- Tyson, whose company develops and licenses rights to emerging
- biomass technologies, disagrees. "These people [the UW scientists]
- are ten years behind. They don't know the current state of the
- art," he says. "We are much closer than that."
-
- Still, Tyson stresses the need for "a national policy" to develop
- the technology and build the refineries to convert biomass to
- fuel. "Bring the troops home and put them to work to build this
- infrastructure," he urges. "That will scare the daylights out of
- that part of the world. When [oil exporting countries] see we
- don't need them anymore, oil prices will come down. More
- importantly, we will not have to go to war for this reason
- anymore."
-
- "Let's harvest the sun through the process of photosynthesis,"
- continues Tyson in a tone reminiscent of the narrator in Hemp for
- Victory. "Let's harvest solar energy into clean, safe fuels."
-
- OBSTACLES
-
- The revival of hemp and the development of other promising non
- food uses for fallow cropland will be discussed at an April 5
- conference in Middleton organized by Sholts and other state
- agricultural officials. Gov. Thompson, outgoing federal Small
- Business Administration head Susan Engeleiter, and representatives
- of agribusiness will attend the all-day affair, which is open to
- the public for a $20 fee.
-
- Tyson, who is now focusing on "demonstration projects" to prove
- the viability of biomass technology, hopes Wisconsin can get the
- ball rolling by genetically engineering a strain of hemp that
- lacks psychoactive properties. "It can be done," he says
- unreservedly. "We can make anything we want to now."
-
- Agronomist LeMahieu agrees, saying the goal should be to create "a
- whole new plant" that lacks alkaloids and doesn't look like
- ordinary marijuana - ostensibly to foil folks who might wish, as
- Masel puts it, to "sneak a few" smokeable specimens alongside
- those grown for fiber or biomass.
-
- But LeMahieu frets about the legal roadblocks to any use of hemp.
- "State laws would have to change, federal laws would have to
- change, and we have international agreements that prohibit it.,"
- he says.
-
- Jim Haney, assistant to state Attorney General James Doyle, notes
- that the state Controlled Substances Board can issue permits
- allowing possession of otherwise illegal drugs "for purposes of
- scientific research, instructional activities, chemical analysis,
- or other special uses." However, rejoins Masel, the wholesale
- cultivation of hemp would still be illegal under state and federal
- laws-which define marijuana in terms of plant parts, not alkaloid
- content.
-
- Ultimately the psychological obstacles to renewed hemp production
- may prove more formidable than legal ones. UW researcher Faulkner
- is uneasy even discussing the plant's potential, sensing
- "widespread opposition to and repression of the whole idea that
- hemp may have other uses."
-
- Masel is more optimistic. "I think [domestic revival of hemp]
- could happen surprisingly quickly," he says. Whenever one state
- moves the others are going to follow, rather than see that state
- make all the money."
-
- Does Wisconsin, which in 1990 seized and eradicated 849,324
- domestic marijuana plants, 97% of which were wild plants no self
- respecting marijuana smoker would want, have the gumption to
- become that first state? Put it another way: Is making billions of
- dollars while helping save the environment and achieve domestic
- energy independence a strong enough incentive for officials like
- Thompson to let a long-haired radical like Ben Masel say "I told
- you so"?
-
-
-