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In 2014, the University of Kentucky grew the state's first
legal hemp since World War II. (Photo by Chase Milner) |
Hemp offers limited hope for Eastern Kentuckians
looking for an economic alternative to the region's shrunken coal industry, Rachel Cramer
reports in the "Crossing the Divide" series produced by the
Ground Truth Project and Boston's
WGBH. Her story aired on
West Virginia Public Broadcasting's "Inside Appalachia."
Kentucky is a leader in the development of commercial hemp, under special provisions that its representatives put the 2014 Farm Bill. In the state this year, 200 approved growers planted 3,000 acres, Cramer reports. Most crops are in Central and Western Kentucky; hilly Eastern Kentucky has much less land for farming, and a limited history of commercial agriculture.
"We can't expect Eastern Kentucky and West Virginia to become major contributors to hemp as a commodity crop,"
University of Kentucky agronomist David Williams told Kramer. He is among researchers who are trying to determine what varieties and growing methods produce the greatest yields at Kentucky's latitude and climate, under a program overseen by the state
Department of Agriculture.
Hemp has a reputation of growing anywhere, but that doesn't mean it can grow productively anywhere. Nathan Hall told Kramer that he tried it on strip-mined land and failed, but Williams said there is potential in Appalachia's narrow valleys for growing seeds and seedlings that could be sold to hemp farmers elsewhere.
Kramer reports that some of Kentucky's hemp was planted for for fiber, but most was for cannabidiol, an oil with medicinal properties. "The hemp strains with the highest CBD levels also have higher levels of THC," the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana, another product of the cannabis plant. "If the THC content is higher than 0.3 percent, the grower is required to burn the crop."
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