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- From: davidson@homer.cs.unc.edu (Andrew Davidson)
- Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs,alt.drugs,talk.environment,sci.environment
- Subject: Hemp paper in France
- Date: 24 Feb 91 22:22:42 GMT
-
- The following article appeared in British journal New Scientist, November
- 13, 1980. It's pretty long, but there are some great facts in it. The
- initial Anslinger quote actually appeared under a photo later in the
- article. Reprinted without permission. Typos are mine.
-
- ----------------------------- Begin Article -----------------------------
-
- NO MARIHUANA: PLENTY OF HEMP
-
- French farmers are doing well out of the growing market for hemp fibres.
- British farmers could face 14 years in jail if they followed suit.
-
- by Tim Malyon and Anthony Henman
-
- "Now this hemp is the finest fibre known to mankind, my God, if you ever
- have a shirt made out of it, your grandchildren would never wear it out.
- You take Polish families. We used to see marijuana in the yards of
- Polish families. We'd go in and start to tear it up and the man came out
- with his shotgun, yelling: 'These are my clothes for next winter.'"
- -- Harry J. Anslinger, former Commissioner, US Federal Bureau of Narcotics
-
- Eight thousand hectares of EEC-subsidised cannabis growing in France --
- it seemed inconceivable. Our source of information, however, left little
- doubt as to its accuracy. The neat scientific pamphlets of the
- Federation Nationale des Producteurs de Chanvre (FNPC) could hardly be
- accused of pandering to the pot culture. Anxious to confirm the fact at
- first hand, we hopped on the early morning train out of Paris's Gare
- Montparnasse, and two hours later were met in Le Mans by the research
- officer of the FNPC. It was early in September, just as the harvest was
- getting into full swing. With a justified pride in his achievement, our
- contact showed us out to the experimental fields, where acre upon acre of
- the French type of monoecious hemp(with male and female flowers on the
- same plant) vied with the trial introductions of five-metre dioecious
- plants (only one sex per plant) from Italy, and thick-set Lebanese bushes
- of the kind normally used for producing hashish. Apart from these latter
- plants -- a mere dozen or so, grown exclusively for "comparative
- purposes" -- we were assured that the rest of the crop had been subject
- to selective breeding which reduced the levels of THC -- the psychoactive
- ingredient of cannabis -- to virtual insignificance. On collecting a few
- "female flowering tops" and smoking them in Paris later that same
- evening, we were forced to concede the truth: French hemp is useless as
- a drug plant, and the smoking of even large quantities of it succeeded in
- giving us a mild but irritating headache...
-
- Hemp's history in the service to human culture is as long as it is
- diverse. The Neolithic "Yang Shao" culture of China (4000 BC) is
- believed to have used the long fibrous strands on the outside of the
- cannabis stalk for rope and cloth. According to Professor Hui-Lin Li, an
- economic botanist at the University of Pennsylvania, cannabis seeds, rich
- in protein, "were considered, along with millet, rice, barley and
- soybean, as one of the major grains of ancient China". The first paper
- was made of hempen rags, while the earliest pharmacopoeia in existence,
- the Pen-ts'ao-Ching, states that "the fruits of hemp...if taken in excess
- will produce hallucinations [literally seeing devils]. If taken over a
- long term, it makes one communicate with spirits and lightens one's
- body." Writing in the 5th century BC, the Greek historian Herodotus
- describes how the Scythians would purge themselves after funerals by
- inhaling the smoke of hemp seeds thrown onto hot stones. "The Scythians
- enjoy it so much that they howl with pleasure..." Linguistic evidence
- indicates that in the original Hebrew and Aramaic texts of the Old
- Testament the "holy anointing oil" which God directed Moses to make
- (Exodus 30:23) was composed of myrrh, cinnamon, cannabis and cassia.
-
- PRECIOUS PLANTS
-
- Up to the middle of the last century France alone was cultivating more
- than 100,000 hectares, whilst so precious was the plant in Tudor England
- that Queen Elizabeth I exacted a bounty of 5 gold sovereigns on any
- farmer who did not cultivate it. The reason for such a penalty was
- simple: hemp fibre is the strongest vegetable fibre known to man, and
- can be grown easily and in a single six-month cycle from April to
- September. Before the introduction of tropical sisals and Manila hemp,
- it was essential for the rope and canvas (the very word derived from
- cannabis, according to the OED) used to outfit the Navy. An American
- commentary on the 1764 Hemp Law governing importation from "His Majesty's
- colonies into Great Britain" notes the necessity to "render their mother
- country independent of certain northern powers (mainly the Baltic States)
- upon whom her former dependence, for a supply of naval stores, has been
- frequently very precarious".
-
- This strategic aspect of cannabis as a basic fibre source reappeared for
- a short while during the Second World War. In the wake of Pearl Harbour
- and the Japanese invasion of the Philippines, the US was cut off from its
- supplies of Manila rope and twine, and made considerable efforts to
- revive its by then sagging hemp trade. Planters' manuals were rapidly
- reprinted, and the estimated area under cultivation increased from 585
- hectares in 1939 to 59,500 hectares in 1943. By 1946 the total had
- dropped back to 1950 hectares and the industry was on its way to
- extinction in the industrial West.
-
- A number of factors combined to bring about this state of affairs. The
- production of high-quality hemp fibre is a labour-intensive business.
- The hemp stalks must be dried in the field, then transported to a
- "retting pit" where they are left in water for several days to start the
- process of separating the fibre from the woody core (known as hurds) of
- the stalk. The retted plants are then taken back to the farm to be dried
- out in building similar to hop oast houses. The stalks are passed
- through what is essentially a large mangle separating fibre from broken
- hurd. The hurds are then shaken out, and after "scutching and heckling"
- (a process of cleaning and separating individual strands) the long,
- strong fibres are ready for spinning and weaving. In a pre-industrial
- society, the bulk of this work could be carried out during the winter
- when farmers had little to do. With the importation of cheap tropical
- fibres and the demise of the sail, however, such labour-intensive work no
- longer proved financially viable. A mechanical hemp "breaker" was
- introduced in the early 1900s, but it had arrived too late to save a
- trade which by then was having to cope with international cannabis
- prohibition and a new image for the plant, from essential crop to
- assassin of youth.
-
- Synthetic textiles also helped hasten hemp's decline, as so, too, did the
- 19th century introduction of the chemical woodpulping process. As
- already mentioned, hemp textiles were one essential source for rag paper.
- After the Second World War, for instance, Robert Fletcher and Sons, the
- paper manufacturer owned by the Imperial Tobacco Group, bought up large
- stocks of Nazi concentration camp uniforms made from hemp, which it
- converted into paper. Since then, Fletchers has stopped using textiles
- for paper because it is almost impossible to obtain them free of
- synthetic materials which wreak havoc on the machinery. It now imports
- raw hemp fibres from France.
-
- For, curiously enough, as wood-pulp paper replaced rag paper and hemp
- textile products disappeared from the market, a new process was being
- developed in France that used the raw hemp fibres for the production of
- high-quality, strong papers. The fibre is extremely resilient and ideal
- for the manufacture of cigarette paper, which must combine high tensile
- strength with extreme lightness. Fibre for paper is cheaper to produce
- than fibre for textiles, because it needs neither to be as long nor of
- such high quality. Paralleling the growth in the consumption of illicit,
- high-THC forms of cannabis, the new hemp cigarette paper industry was
- launched in the early 1960s in France, and established its present
- prominence in the halcyon years between 1967 and 1971. Statistics show a
- decline in the area of French cannabis sown for textiles from 1084
- hectares in 1961 to 147 hectares in 1968, the last year for which
- official records of this type of cultivation exist. In contrast, areas
- dedicated to paper production increased from 61 hectares in 1961 to 3181
- hectares in 1968, peaking at 10,595 hectares in 1977.
-
- The growth of this new market for the pant in France was accompanied by a
- radical restructuring of the economics of the hemp business. Though a
- few farmers grow the crop principally for the sake of the subsidies they
- receive (1405 francs per hectare last year), the bulk of current
- production comes from mechanised concerns with high levels of
- productivity. One of the great advantages of hemp for farmers lies in
- its use as a rotation crop, breaking up the soil with its deep root
- system and also eliminating weeds, thus leaving the land ready for the
- direct sowing of a winter wheat crop before the arrival off the first
- frosts. An enthusiastic response to this potential has brought about the
- large-scale introduction of hemp into areas where it was not
- traditionally cultivated, and in Bar-sur-Aube, for instance, 200 km
- south-east of Paris, a flourishing cooperative has been established to
- represent the interests of part of the new hemp agribusiness. There, 93
- farmers helped finance their own breaking mill which 1978 was processing
- 2500 hectares of hemp.
-
- SREAMLINED MECHANISATION
-
- A certain amount of trade secrecy surrounds the exact mechanical
- processes involved in "breaking" the dried hemp stalks and separating
- bast fibre -- the phloem fibres, most suitable for paper production --
- >from the woody hurds. The director of the Bar-sur-Aube cooperative
- politely refused us saying that as he sold 20 per cent of his product to
- England, he did not wish to encourage "English competition". The De
- Mauduit mill likewise refused to receive us, even though the FNPC
- intervened in our behalf.
-
- Their reticence is understandable. It is streamlined mechanisation in
- the breaking mills which has made the production of crude bast fibre for
- paper much more cost-effective when undertaken on a large industrial
- scale. Not surprisingly this new system has led to an ever-increasing
- centralisation of the hemp business. Various small mills were involved
- in the early 1960s, but in the past decade the field has narrowed to two
- major concerns, besides the Bar-sur-Aube cooperative. One is the
- relatively traditional Job cigarette paper company in Toulouse, and the
- other the giant De Mauduit factory in Quimperle, which has prevailed over
- all its competitors in the main hemp-growing areas of central and
- north-eastern France. Its aggressive business acumen -- De Mauduit is
- actually a subsidiary of the US paper multinational Kimberly Clark who
- makes Kleenex tissues -- is based upon a fine understanding of the
- profitability of the trade: French farmers receive 435 francs per tonne
- for the dried hemp stalks and De Mauduit charges 2500 francs for the
- prepared bast paper fibre, for which the British paper maker ends up
- paying L650 per tonne. De Mauduit's treated paper fibre, hemp pulp
- board, costs an astonishing 6500 francs per tonne.
-
- Since the break mills have a virtually monopoly, the FNPC in Le Mans is
- looking for ways of diversifying the market for the hemp its members
- produce. Research is being undertaken into the possibility of including
- a proportion of hemp in various courser grades of paper, including
- wrapping paper, as a means of increasing strength. Some printing paper
- manufacturers, including the company that produces the glossy pages of
- Paris Match, are considering introducing a proportion of hemp into their
- paper pulp. So far the only indication that British companies other than
- Robert Fletcher and Sons are actively researching hemp's paper potential
- comes from the Manchester University's Department of Paper Science, which
- refused to divulge information on recent work in this area because of
- what information it had was a "trade secret".
-
- Further potential for hemp in paper manufacture involves utilising the
- plant's woody core, the hurds. While the average fibre yield per hectare
- is approximately 185 kg, fully two-and-a-half tonnes of hurds are
- produced from the same area. These are now being sold for animal bedding
- and for producing building boards with good sound-proofing properties.
- As far back as 1916, however, the US Department of Agriculture carried
- out a number of semi-commercial tests on the use of hurds for paper
- production and concluded: "After several trials, under conditions of
- treatment and manufacture which are regarded as favourable in comparison
- with those used with wood pulp, paper was produced which received very
- favourable comment both from investigators and from the trade and which
- according to official tests would be classed as No. 1 machine finish
- printing paper." Not only could hemp hurds compete with wood pulp on
- cost and quality, but they were also found to be far more economical in
- terms of land use. "Every tract of of 10,000 acres which is devoted to
- hemp raising year by year is equivalent to a sustained pulp-producing
- capacity of 40,500 acres of average pulp-wood lands." Despite a 1977
- Italian study which found that this usage remained commercially viable,
- paper companies are apparently disregarding the potential for hurds, even
- though paper production from hurds is much less polluting than from wood
- pulp. Hemp hurds contain on average 4 per cent lignin, as opposed to
- 18-30 per cent in wood, and it is the effluent resulting from washing out
- the lignin that causes the most pollution in the chemical pulping
- process.
-
- Some thought is now going into researching non-paper applications for
- hemp products. At present seeds (farmers receive 10 francs per kg;
- average yield is 50 kg/ha) have a limited use, being sold mainly as
- animal feed, bird food and anglers' bait. However, cannabis seeds
- contain 30-45 per cent high protein oil, which is edible, or may be used
- in future in paint production.
-
- The French hemp industry is of course entirely disregarding cannabis'
- textile potential, despite the fact that in Brittany some small farmers
- still produce hempen sheets and other hard-wearing cloth for their own
- use. We were informed in France that the production of the high quality
- fibres required for textiles remains prohibitively costly and that rope
- and sacking are imported from Eastern Bloc countries where labour costs
- remain lower. Scottish hemp fibre importers obtain a large percentage of
- their material from Poland. According to our research, the finest hemp
- cloth has always been produced by the Chinese and Italians, and
- Yugoslavia, India and Japan are still producing hemp textiles, the latter
- in combination with synthetic fibres.
-
- What might be the future for revitalised hemp fibre industry in the UK?
- Certainly, the British paper-makers could not but welcome any attempt to
- undercut prices they pay for imported hemp, but in order to achieve this,
- considerable capital must be invested in British breaking mills.
- However, what is possible of more interest than the now established use
- of fibre for high quality paper is the future of hemp fibre in textiles.
- Given careful preparation, high-quality hemp cloth can be produced in
- Britain that is both comfortable and more durable than any other natural
- textile. A hemp/wool mix was once widely used in France, being known
- generically as berlinge. Demand is growing for durable natural fibre
- products where the public will pay a somewhat higher price for a superior
- product. Certain clothing manufacturers in the US have expressed an
- interest in hemp jeans (Levi Strauss's original jeans were made from
- hempen sailcloth), while the outdoor equipment industry is also returning
- where possible to natural fibres, and hemp might be ideal in, for
- instance, specialist mountaineering backpacks. Given the mess in which
- the British textile industry finds itself, such innovative ideas could
- well bear fruit, particularly if the technology can be developed from the
- existing machinery in the linen industry to keep the cost of preparing
- weaving quality hemp fibre within reasonable limits.
-
- All this, of course, presumes a more sensible government attitude to
- British cultivation laws. (Cannabis stalks and seeds are already legal,
- and can be safely imported.) While international law governing cannabis
- cultivation makes a specific exemption for industrial uses, no such
- exemption exists in British law, and growers must obtain their official,
- low-THC seed directly from the FNPC, informing the Ministries of Health
- and Agriculture of their intentions. Such a model could easily be
- introduced into this country in conformity with the Common Agriculture
- Policy. Since the rapid expansion of the French industry furnishes proof
- of profit potential, British farmers might be justifiably annoyed at
- being threatened with a 14 year jail sentence for growing a plant,
- generously subsidised by the EEC on the continent, from which their
- French neighbours are making good money. Or perhaps Her Majesty's
- government should sue the EEC commissioners for conspiring to aid and
- abet a criminal offence?
-
- ------------------------------ End Article ------------------------------
-
- Freedom,
- Drew
-
-
- --
- Drew Davidson \\ HELP FULLY INFORM JURORS! TELL A FRIEND:
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