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- Source:
US-NORML
- USA:
Hemp Madness
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- You'd
have to eat 450 bags of hemp chips within about an hour
for THC, the active ingredient in pot, to even begin
registering in your blood. But try telling that to
the Americans. Take the travails of Chatham-based
hemp seed producer Kenex. The company thought it
had an agreement that would allow it to sell its product
in the U.S. after it threatened to sue U.S.
Customs for seizing 40,000 pounds of hemp birdseed that
the Americans said showed trace amounts of THC.
But last fall, the DEA issued a surprise
"clarification of the rules" making any
consumable trace of THC illegal; everything from hemp
pretzels to salad dressing will be banned as of February
6. Kenex has joined the Hemp Industry Association
and six American hemp companies in a civil suit against
the DEA.
But the company has also decided to go another route in
its latest tiff, this time claiming a breach under
Chapter 11 of NAFTA and seeking more than $20 million in
damages. The very NAFTA regulations used by Ethyl Corp to
force the Canadian government to repeal its ban on the
contentious gasoline additive MMT are now being used by
Kenex to defend its environmentally heralded hemp
products. "Under Chapter 11 of NAFTA, member
countries can't treat foreigners any worse than domestic
companies," says Kenex attorney Todd Weiler.
Kenex argues that the ban discriminates against Canadian
producers since most hemp products come to the U.S.
from Canada, and Kenex's competitors, the producers of
poppy and flax seed products, don't have to worry about
the ban.
The U.S.'s treatment of Kenex has led the Canadian
government to pipe up on the matter. The Department
of Foreign Affairs and Trade ( DFAIT ) recently sent a
letter to the DEA cautioning that the ban would violate
World Trade Organization rules requiring that
risk-assessment tests be run before products are banned.
Says DFAIT deputy director of trade Andre Lemay, "We
don't feel the ban is legitimate. We say,
"Show us the proof.'"
The DEA, which has yet to respond to the government's
letter, declined to comment.
Says Adam Eidinger, of the U.S. hemp advocacy group
VoteHemp, "There's a lot more caffeine in a cup of
decaf than there is THC in hemp foods."
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