"Hemp
can save the planet," said the hippie, smiling and handing me a flyer.
"I'll read it later," I assured him, walking away and thinking "yeah, right--what
a great rationalization for someone who wants to smoke pot all the time."
At home,
I thought I'd skim the thing before tossing it out. Packed with small
print and detailed information, it turned out to be well written and demanded
careful reading. It convinced me to open my mind about hemp, and
I've been interested in the plant's many uses ever since. Hemp makes
excellent paper, so we could let trees grow larger and reserve wood for
higher purposes than pulp. Hemp makes durable fabrics of many textures.
High quality, clean fuel can be produced from hemp "biomass." Hemp
seeds are a concentrated food, and hemp seed oil has many uses.
The
hemp plant--cannabis sativa--grows well in many climates, is drought tolerant,
disease resistant, germinates early and matures in 120 days at a height
of 10-15 feet. It is naturally resistant to both weeds and insects
and thus requires little or no use of pesticides and herbicides.
The plant has a deep taproot which aerates the soil and brings minerals
to the surface. It produces a phenomenal amount of cellulose
fiber that is much stronger than the fiber in wood or cotton.
The plant varieties used for industrial fiber production are virtually
drug-free, whereas the varieties cultivated by marijuana growers
are relatively poor in fiber quality.
We have
a long relationship with this plant. Sailing ships used hemp rope
and were powered with hemp sails. Soldiers' uniforms and flags were
made of hemp. The horse-drawn wagons of our westward migration were
covered with hemp canvas ("canvas" derives from the word "cannabis").
The first Levi's blue jeans were made of hemp. George Washington
and Thomas Jefferson cultivated the plant.
Hemp
paper is stronger and more durable than paper from wood pulp. It
does not yellow with age, and can be recycled many more times than wood-derived
paper. The Gutenberg Bible and Declaration of Independence were printed
on hemp paper. Many countries today use hemp in their paper currency.
Wood's high lignin content hinders paper-making; many poisons are used
and generated in paper production to remove this substance. Hemp
is low in lignin, and the processes used to make paper from hemp are much
cleaner. Hemp has more than twice the available cellulose as wood,
and produces 3-8 tons of dry fiber per acre per year, more than twice the
amount of the fast-growing Southern Pine. Thus, hemp can produce
four times as much paper per acre as wood. Some re-tooling
will be needed, but with the necessary political will we could begin soon
to meet many of our paper needs with industrial hemp production.
Hemp
fibers are very long, and thus ideally suited for use in composite fiber
board: with hemp, pressed board can be made that is lighter and stronger
than plywood.
Hemp
has a long history of use in textiles. In addition to heavy-duty
uses like rope, canvas, or carpet backing, modern techniques allow
hemp to be processed into smoother textures approximating that of
linen or even silk. Hemp is much more durable than cotton;
hemp clothing lasts longer. Hemp produces more than twice the usable
fiber per acre as cotton, and more than five times the fiber of flax (linen).
Due to the pesticide war on insects, cotton is today the most polluting
crop grown by humanity. In the San Joaquin Valley, devastating soil
salinity problems result from heavy (government subsidized) irrigation
of cotton crops. As noted, hemp is drought tolerant and thrives without
pesticides or herbicides.
In addition
to the uses of hemp fiber, hemp can be converted into methanol and ethanol--clean
burning fuels which can help us reduce air pollution and its attendant
health problems, while decreasing our dependence on oil and reserving versatile
petroleum for higher uses than just burning. For this "biomass" energy
production, fast growing plants that are high in cellulose and low in lignin
are best. Hemp is ideally suited, and this could be feasible on a
very large scale.
Hemp
seeds and hemp seed oil are drug free and edible, and contain admirable
proportions of essential fatty acids. Still, these are high-fat foods
and should thus be used only in moderation. Hemp seed oil has been
used in paint, and remains useful today in cosmetics, salves, and ointments.
The
latin name "cannabis sativa" means "useful hemp." If this plant is
so
wonderful, why haven't we been using it? The political
history is instructive. Hemp had been widely used, but in the early
20th century the techniques for processing hemp fiber remained labor intensive
and therefore expensive. In the 1930s DuPont patented nylon, which
promised great profits in clothing and rope production. At this time
DuPont also patented the processes and sold the chemicals that were used
in wood-pulp paper manufacturing. William Randolph Hearst owned many
newspapers and extensive timberlands. DuPont and Hearst agreed to
a large deal which promised to provide Hearst with very cheap paper with
which to dominate the newspaper industry. Hemp threatened this arrangement:
a "decorticating" machine had been invented which greatly facilitated hemp
processing; hemp was poised to become competitive with wood pulp for paper
production. The Hearst papers began running articles about the evils
of marijuana, often wildly exaggerating the dangers. The infamous
movie "Reefer Madness" is representative of this campaign, which culminated
in the Marijuana Tax Act of 1937, effectively banning
the hemp plant by taxing it prohibitively. Hearst
and DuPont had influenced government to squelch their potential competition.
DuPont's annual report of 1937 referred happily to "the extent to which
the revenue-raising power of government can be converted into an instrument
for forcing acceptance of sudden new ideas of industrial and social reorganization."
It is ironic that many people of the time were unaware that marijuana came
from the same plant as the well known and appreciated hemp fiber.
During
World War II this ban was temporarily lifted, as hemp was needed for the
war effort. Production increased and a patriotic movie called "Hemp
for Victory" was released. Following the war, the prohibition on
hemp was reinstated and remains today. History has even been re-written
to eliminate the plant: a display on the history of textiles at the
Smithsonian Institution makes no mention of the important role hemp has
played.
It is
time for public commitment to study and utilize the stupendous benefits
this plant offers us. Non-drug, fiber rich hemp is being grown in
Canada, China, Russia, France, England, Germany, Holland, and other countries.
It's time for a change. Hemp can be a powerful ally in our work to
meet human needs while healing the planet.
GlobalHemp.com
has a great deal of information. Check under archives>essays--the
essays on "The Extinction of Kentucky Hemp" and "Energy Farming" are especially
helpful.
Here's a good
article on Hemp paper.
Hempisphere
offers information on hemp products as well as general information on the
history and uses of hemp.
HempWorld
has lots of information and articles from back issues of HempWorld magazine.
Here's some
information on the history
of hemp and the banning of hemp in the United States.
Hempseed.com
is another website devoted to education about hemp.