Stronger Than Steel? – Hemp Rebar Could Start an Eco-Friendly Movement in Building Materials

Source: Cannabis.net | Author: Joseph Billions | Sep 3, 2022

Researchers from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York, confirm that hemp rebar could be a suitable alternative to steel in cement construction. Dan Walczyk, director of the manufacturing innovation center and professor of mechanical engineering, and Alexandros Tsamis, associate director of the Architecture Science and Ecology Center and assistant professor of architecture at Rensselaer Polytechnic, say they have produced an alternative to steel in concrete buildings and various infrastructure projects. Both scientists agree that hemp-based natural fiber-reinforced thermoplastic rebar has the potential to displace steel as the most preferred reinforcing technology in a few years. These hemp rebars are partially guaranteed to eliminate corrosion challenges, and they are more durable than steel bars.

Rebar is a crucial component in the frameworks of cement buildings. They help construct perfectly standing and durable skeletal frameworks for convention infrastructure projects. On its own, concrete lacks tensile strength, and this is the primary reason why rebars are used—to provide tensile strength.

The Manufacturing Potential of Hemp

About 150 years ago, before the onset of cannabis prohibition and the criminalization of offenders, hemp was used to produce over 75% of the goods consumed by Americans. The manufacturing of hemp-derived goods was scrapped when the government banned the cultivation and usage of the drug based on the threat of abuse. Currently, hemp is at the forefront of manufacturing discussions due to its undeniable potential to serve humans and the global ecosystem.

At the crucial point of severe environmental degradation and climate change, an environment-friendly crop like hemp could be the world’s savior. Hemp is a biodegradable harvest crop that can derive recyclables, renewables, and reusable products. For products that can’t be recycled, they are guaranteed to degrade into the environment as quickly as possible. Environmentalists who are researching the benefits of hemp claim that the mass production of the crop could go a long way towards limiting global warming effects through the reduction of carbon monoxide compounds in the air.

The industrial use of hemp plants could help produce thousands of essential items needed for day-to-day activities, including plastics, paper, clothing, linen, and drugs. It could also produce several technological tools and building items like rebar.

Hemp and the Steel Industry

Studies at Rensselaer Polytechnic and other reputable institutions point out that hemp could be a perfect replacement for steel. These scientists claim these plants are phenomenal crops meant to be mass-cultivated on industrial scales to produce dozens of products.

For example, the various car parts produced from steel or plastic can be alternatively made from hemp. And hemp is a much stronger and more durable raw material than steel and plastic. Yes, hemp is stronger than both materials and products derived from the crop that have long-lasting lifespans.

The New Study

The preliminary study confirms that hemp possesses better strength capabilities than steel and has a higher chance of substantially reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

The Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute for Energy, Built Environment, and Smart Systems (EBESS) are in charge of this new research. The institute is committed to developing a broad strategy for a durable and cost-effective hemp industry to address the constant climate change challenges in a traditionally powered ecosystem. The institute is an interdisciplinary initiative that the private school believes will close the gap between business, engineering, and design.

Walczyk and Tsamis said the research was borne out of a need for innovative and affordable hemp technologies. They also stated that hemp rebar is not the only technology being researched. These other innovations include new hemp biocomposite processing techniques and the development of decortication technology to separate hemp fibers without reducing their mechanical properties.

More Details

Concrete does not possess the internal strength required to stand on its own without support. Construction workers and engineers use steel rebars to provide tensile or inner strength. Rebars are more sturdy rods, conventionally made from steel, but not long.

The research team at the private research university published that the newly developed hemp rebars can provide the necessary framework for building and infrastructural construction. They also stressed the non-corrosive properties of proposed rebars.

Hemp is not the only material that could replace steel for construction purposes. In 1958, Roger Bacon discovered that graphite whiskers possessed ten times more tensile strength than steel and three times its stiffness. After this discovery, graphite was used to make carbon fibers. Recent findings of hemp claim hemp fibers are much stronger than these carbon fibers.

Another notable material in construction is graphene. The Science Journal discovered that graphene sheets have at least a hundred times the strength of steel. The carbon variant is an excellent conductor of electricity and can be combined with polythene products to allow conductivity. It has also been used to produce super-energy batteries and electric vehicles. The downside to this material is the cost of production. Another reason hemp is famous. The plant mimics many features of graphene, steel, and graphite whiskers. It could store as much energy as graphene and has more tensile strength than steel, and can be mass-produced at cost-effective prices.

Note that for hemp to be mass-produced for day-to-day products and industrial tools or components, there are still a few technical challenges that must be overcome. Some of this includes developing efficient processing methods and equipment that would best fit the hemp materials, manufacturing methods, and property data. Failure to overcome these hurdles would result in low-quality hemp rebar samples, among others.

Bottom Line

Hemp can be used to bring multiple high-end products to reality at far lower costs than steel and other traditional production materials. The ongoing development and research on the potential usefulness of hemp plants will shed more light on this. Rensselaer’s Seed to City Hemp Initiative will not only place the school on the hemp industry radar but also contribute to the progress of the New York engineering, design, business, and hemp industries. This proposed natural fiber-reinforced thermoplastic rebar derived from hemp plants will keep hemp structures intact for a long time.

Note that steel cannot be replaced entirely in the industry because it remains the best option for producing some substantial items and electrical tools.

More Hemp In Space

Source: HempGazette.com | Author: Terry Lassitenaz | Aug 22, 2022

The USA’s Redwire Corporation is gearing up to enable hemp to be grown in the International Space Station.

In what the company says is the only commercially owned and operated plant growth platform capable of growing from seed to maturity in space, the Redwire Greenhouse could launch in spring next year.

During this mission, Redwire client Dewey Scientific will grow industrial hemp in the greenhouse during a 60-day experiment for a gene expression study. Dewey Scientific is a cannabis-focused firm seeking to increase efficiencies and crop yields while reducing crop inputs.

“We work at the intersection of classical breeding and molecular biology,” states the company.

The hemp experiment is just the first step says Redwire.

“Redwire Greenhouse will expand opportunities for scientific discovery to improve crop production on Earth and enable critical research for crop production in space to benefit future long-duration human spaceflight,” stated Redwire’s Dave Reed.

As well as improving crops on our own planet, it’s something that will also be critical in space  as humanity reaches for the stars – not just for food, but oxygen and water reclamation.

“Increasing the throughput of crop production research in space, through commercially developed capabilities, will be important to deliver critical insights for NASA’s Artemis missions and beyond,” said Mr Reed.

Under the Artemis program, NASA is collaborating with commercial and international partners to establish a sustainable long-term presence on the Moon to prepare for missions to Mars.

This won’t be Redwire’s first acquaintance with the ISS. Its Passive Orbital Nutrient Delivery System (PONDS) devices developed in partnership with Tupperware Brands are already operating on the space station. PONDS was developed for NASA’s Vegetable Production System (Veggie).

This also won’t be the first time industrial hemp has been taken into space. Officially, that occurred in 2019 when seeds from Kentucky-grown hemp were taken to the ISS to assess the stability of the seeds after prolonged exposure to microgravity conditions.

 Trivia: The first plants grown in space were Arabidopsis (rockcress) by the crew of the Soviet Salyut 7 space station back in 1982. Seeds had been taken into space before that.

Building Low-Carbon Hemp Homes

Source: AZOBuild.com | Author: Reginald Davey | Aug 21, 2022

Building new structures from low-carbon and renewable resources is gaining significant attention both within the construction industry and wider society. This article will look at constructing new homes with hemp, a low-carbon, and sustainable material.

The Construction Industry: A Major Contributor to Climate Change

According to the World Economic Forum, the global construction industry contributes around 38% of total global carbon emissions. The number of buildings constructed worldwide every week could fill a city the size of Paris.

Approximately half the carbon emissions produced by a building during its serviceable lifetime are produced during its construction before people even use it. This is known as “embedded carbon”, and materials such as concrete and cement are estimated to be responsible for about 8% of total global carbon emissions.

The construction industry is also responsible for the exploitation of vast amounts of virgin, non-renewable resources, energy, and produces enormous amounts of waste materials during both construction and demolition. Nearly all the waste produced during a building’s lifetime is disposed of in the environment, typically in landfills, losing valuable resources which could otherwise be used to improve the sustainability and circularity of the sector.

Green Strategies in Construction

Recognizing the scale of the issue, the construction industry has focused on strategies to significantly reduce the carbon footprint of new buildings and infrastructure.

Several technologies have been explored in the construction industry, with renewable energy helping to reduce the carbon emissions from sites and being researched for use in the construction of raw materials. In the UK alone, three out of five construction firms have declared interest in using renewable energy sources such as solar or wind power.

Equipment is getting a green upgrade too. Companies have explored the use of environmentally friendly construction equipment, with Hyundai announcing the development of an excavator which is powered by hydrogen fuel cells, with plans to introduce this machinery in 2023.

One of the most interesting areas of sustainable construction is the use of alternative construction materials which can reduce the amount of embedded carbon in new buildings and infrastructure. Numerous sustainable materials have been investigated in studies over the past few decades, with varying degrees of success.

Related Stories

Sustainable construction materials have made their way into the market over the past few years, displacing the use of conventional carbon-intensive materials such as concrete. Examples include geopolymer composites, recycled plastic, recycled wood, rammed earth, bamboo, wool insulation, living rooves, straw bale, Ferrock (a type of recycled material made from materials such as steel and dust), and hemp.

The Use of Hemp in Sustainable Construction

Hemp is an ancient construction material. Over the course of recent history, the use of hemp has been overshadowed by its association with its psychoactive cousin, cannabis. However, there has been renewed interest in the use of hemp for a variety of commercial products, including as a sustainable building material that can offer a low-carbon alternative to conventional materials.

Many building materials based on hemp have been developed by scientists in recent decades, which show excellent commercial promise. Hemp particleboards and chipboards use this eco-friendly plant-derived material and incorporate other fibers such as flax to produce a stronger, lighter, and more moisture-resistant alternative to conventional chipboard.

Hempcrete is a revolutionary concrete-like material that combines industrial hemp hurds (inner cores of hemp plant stems), water, and lime-based binders. Once applied and dried, hempcrete becomes a strong and lightweight building product that can be used in new homes.

Building homes with hemp | Freethink

Hempcrete offers advantages such as good insulation, less embodied carbon and energy, low flammability, mold and pest resistance, CO2 absorption during curing, increased strength over time, moisture resistance, non-toxicity, and full recyclability.

Hemp provides several benefits for the construction industry and is playing an increasing role in the sector’s net zero carbon aims to meet international climate change mitigation targets by 2050.

Case Study: Common Knowledge – Building Tiny Homes from Hemp

The potential of hemp as an eco-friendly and low-carbon construction alternative is vast, but one social enterprise in Ireland is championing the small benefits of this ancient building material. Teaming with Margent Farm, a hemp producer, Common Knowledge has designed a low-carbon tiny home using hemp.

They have stated that their tiny homes could help people struggling with the cost-of-living and housing crisis. Named Tigin Tiny Homes, they are essentially oversized caravans. Aside from corrugated hemp cladding panels, these homes are made from other sustainable materials such as cork for insulation and natural rubber for flooring tiles. They can be purchased pre-made or people can learn to build their own.

The hemp panels were first used in Flat House, a pioneering zero-carbon project and are constructed out of plant fibers and sugar-based resins from agricultural waste. Both are lightweight and extremely sustainable, and whilst planning regulations in the UK restrict their use in architectural products, this is less so when they are used in mobile construction.

Common Knowledge intends to make the plans for their Tigin Tiny Homes open source, which means that they would be free to use for anyone who wants to build their own. These plans would include architectural designs, materials lists, recommended suppliers, and pricing information.

In Summary

Hemp is an ancient building material that has garnered increased interest in recent years due to the need for sustainable alternatives to conventional materials such as concrete and the urgent requirement to reduce the construction industry’s carbon footprint and limit environmental damage. With innovative projects such as Common Knowledge’s Tigin homes, the future of hemp in the construction industry is looking promising.

U.S. trade group cries foul over proposed strict limits on THC in extracts

Source: HempToday.net | Author: HempToday | Aug 16, 2022

A proposed provision in landmark U.S. cannabis legislation under consideration would set an unnecessarily low level for trace amounts of THC in hemp flower-based food products, leading to “the elimination of the substantial majority of the hemp extract and CBD industry,” a trade group has warned.

In a letter sent to main sponsors of the Cannabis Administration and Opportunity Act (CAOA), filed in the Senate last month, the U.S. Hemp Roundtable (USHR), a Kentucky-based trade association, criticized the THC provision in the bill, which sets a limit of 1 milligram of total THC per 100 grams on a dry weight basis, translating into a 0.001% total THC standard.

The CAOA, considered to be the most comprehensive among several cannabis bills currently floating around in the U.S. Congress, is not expected to become law any time soon, but serves as a center of gravity for the discussion of marijuana and hemp policy.

Scope of the CAOA

The bill would recognize the legalization of cannabis by the states and decriminalize, regulate, and tax businesses, offering provisions related to justice, immigration, and enforcement; small business administration; public health; education infrastructure; labor; veterans; banking, housing; and community development.

The U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) would regulate cannabis products through a new Center for Cannabis Products, under provisions in the proposed law. 

“This is an arbitrary and unrealistic standard,” USHR said of the THC limit proposed for hemp-based products. “No full spectrum or broad-spectrum hemp extract would qualify, and likely most CBD isolates would be challenged to comply, given the limitations of current testing technology.

“Indeed, this limit would delegate most, if not all, popular, non-intoxicating CBD and hemp extract products to the adult-use cannabis market,” the group said, urging the bill’s sponsors to reconsider what it called “a misguided standard for intoxication” that is “uniquely onerous and unprecedented.”

Delta-8 should be regulated

In the letter, sent to Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey and Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, the lead sponsors of the CAOA, USHR called for expanded protections for all non-intoxicating hemp derivatives including CBD and other cannabinoids, legalizing the sale of CBD and other hemp extracts as food and beverage ingredients, and loosening up on who may conduct safety evaluations.

Despite its vigorous defense of CBD, USHR said it supports the CAOA’s effort to regulate psychoactive cannabis products, like delta-8 THC, which is derived from hemp-based CBD. Separate regulatory pathways for non-intoxicating hemp and intoxicating cannabis products should be established, USHR recommended.

The CAOA should be changed to establish a more comprehensive rulemaking process for determining daily serving limits for CBD that invites stakeholder input, USHR also urged.

Task force proposed

In addition to the allowable THC levels for consumer products, USHR said other provisions in current CAOA language could undermine the industry, and urged creation of a task force to also set regulations for daily serving limits for CBD, consider the advisability of the current delta-9 THC limit for hemp plants of 0.3%, and address other potentially intoxicating hemp derivatives.

The task force would include representatives from the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA), the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health, hemp growers, manufacturers, processors and distributors, and testing laboratories. 

The group would report findings and offer recommendations within 120 days after being formed, USHR recommended. FDA and other federal agencies would then have 90 days to start the rule-making process to implement the task force’s recommendations.

Reforms move slowly

Observers have said only incremental reform on cannabis is expected in the near future, especially if the Democrats lose the Senate in the 2022 midterm elections. Problems with banking, for example, could be resolved with separate legislation, the SAFE Banking Act, which would finally permit financial institutions to service cannabis companies without fear of reprisal.

While CAOA’s sponsors have said they will not support the SAFE Banking Act in the absence of broader criminal reforms, policy that provides basic financial services for cannabis operators enjoys bi-partisan support in Congress.

About USHR

The U.S. Hemp Roundable is led by Pete Meachum, president, a lobbyist who also serves as Senior Director for Government Affairs for the Cronos Group, Ontario, Canada. The following businesses and organizations are on the USHR board, according to the group’s website: Ananda Hemp (Kentucky), Balanced Health Botanicals (Colorado), Canopy Growth Corporation (Ontario, Canada), CBD American Shaman (Kansas), Cultivated CBD (Minnesota), Curaleaf (Massachusetts), Garden of Life (Florida), GVB Biopharma (Nevada), Hemp Industries Association, Just Brands (Holland), Koi CBD LLC (California), Medterra CBD (California), Recess (New York), Red Mesa Science & Refining (Utah), SC Labs (California), Turning Point Brands (Kentucky), U.S. Hemp Authority, Verge Agritech (United Kingdom), and Zilis (Texas).

Apple Secretly Joined Amazon In Advancing Commercial Cannabis Reform

Source: Forbes.com | Author: Robert Hoban | Feb 15, 2022

This past summer, a little recognized thing occurred — one of the largest and most respected companies in the world quietly changed its policies in favor of cannabis. That company was Apple. As a result, they joined the ranks of Amazon as a global corporation advocating for policy reform that would open a federally legal, commercial cannabis industry in the United States.

For years, large tech companies, including Facebook and Google, have refused to acknowledge the legality of industrial hemp, let alone the legality of medical or recreational marijuana. Finally, Apple bucked that trend. In June, the fine print of Apple’s “App Store Review Guidelines” release stated that apps handling sales and delivery of medical and recreational cannabis in legal jurisdictions are now allowed on the App Store. This was monumental.  

Unlike the big headlines we’ve seen recently from Amazon, Uber, the NFL, and other mainstream, institutional businesses, showing a positively changing attitude toward cannabis, Apple made no big-splash announcement that this had happened. Yet, this change came at a time of a shift in the cannabis paradigm for voters, policymakers, and the average American. 

As we’ve discussed previously, U.S. voters are shifting rapidly and dramatically in favor of cannabis legalization. The most recent Gallup poll showed that 68% of American voters support some form of legalization. There’s also tremendous momentum from the recent unveiling of the Cannabis Administration and Opportunity Act by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden (D-OR) and Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ).

The financial technology experts at ArtisIQ are ahead of the curve in identifying the imperative to collaborate with tech leaders like Apple to update policy to reflect the mainstream adoption of cannabis. Co-Founder and CMO of Artis, Adair Lion shares, “As a fintech company on the cutting-edge of development in both cannabis and retail, Apple’s Policy changes are a monumental shift in the way our society does mobile transactions.”

When political leaders and Fortune 100 companies begin modifying policies and behavior to accommodate something that has been seen as fringe, elicit, or otherwise illegal, the hearts and minds of American start to change. It’s safe to say the tide is turning. 

This is the kind of influence that sets the tone for mainstream behavior. Think back to the early days of Babe Ruth and baseball, where ball players were smoking cigarettes in the dugout and cigarette advertisements abounded. Or more recently, Elon Musk and Tesla’s support of cryptocurrency which influenced much wider adoption and made the price of Bitcoin soar. 

The fine print of Apple’s policy update states that apps involved in the sale of cannabis are exclusive to licensed legal entities and strictly require geo-fencing within the legal jurisdiction. This requires an enormous amount of technological and regulatory compliance and is precisely where a fintech software company like Artis could excel. Consumer behavior shows the need for embedded digital payment technology. There’s been modest growth in payment and technology solutions for the cannabis industry and ancillary service providers. This is in no small part due to federal illegality and the fragmented nature of the industry.   

Apple’s policy adjustments are just an example of the level of innovation and attention to detail that Artis is providing to the cannabis industry. What is it that propels some tech companies above the rest? It’s those that provide solutions for the world’s most complex problems. It’s plain to see that cannabis has presented enormous complexity to politicians, enterprise businesses, and just about every other imaginable cog in the machine of our modern world.  

The contributions of experienced professionals are unequivocally what is necessary to propel cannabis further into the mainstream. These are the building blocks, the intimate details, that ultimately bring to reality the hopes of grand legislation, like the Cannabis Administration and Opportunity Act. Compliant and lawful participation in the cannabis ecosystem is paramount to widespread, mainstream adoption. As one who has had to navigate the grey areas of cannabis law for many years – and I’m as honest as a Denver man can be – I will always applaud the hard work to deliberately pave the way forward for this industry.

Another bill to raise U.S. THC limit to 1.0% introduced in Congress

Source: HempToday.com | Author: HempToday | Feb 8, 2022

A new bill introduced in the U.S. Congress would raise the limit for THC in hemp from 0.3% to 1.0% and adjust other provisions in current law to ease the path to market for producers.

The Hemp Advancement Act of 2022, introduced by Rep. Chellie Pingree, a Maine Democrat, addresses issues arising from the 2018 Farm Bill, which legalized industrial hemp federally.

In addition to raising the THC limit for crops in the field, provisions in the bill aimed at protecting consumers would set the combined limit for delta-9 and other forms of THC in hemp products at 0.3%.

Raising the limit to 1.0% THC in the field would protect farmers from their crops going hot, and protect producers from hemp going over that limit during the production process, which now makes them technically illegal.

Other key provisions

Other proposed provisions would provide additional protections for the processing and transportation of “hot” hemp, end a Drug Enforcement Agency monopoly on registering testing laboratories, and repeal a controversial ban on drug felons obtaining hemp licenses. 

Under current rules in the Farm Bill, hemp growers and processors often struggle to navigate THC testing and transportation requirements. Meanwhile, consumers are often confused by products that are marketed as hemp but which are more appropriately sold in recreational marijuana sales channels.

U.S. Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky has twice introduced a separate measure, the Hemp Economic Mobilization Plan Act, which also includes a proposal to raise the THC limit to 1.0%. The U.S. National Association of State Departments of Agriculture has supported the change.

CBD might help prime cells against COVID

CBD in therapeutic amounts seem to increase the innate anti-viral system of cells readiness to respond to viral infection

Source: University of Waterloo | Author: A.J. Herrington | Jan 11, 2022

Synthetic cannabidiol, a non-psychoactive compound also found in the cannabis plant, appears to prime the innate immune system of cells, potentially offering protection against pathogens such as SARS-CoV-2.

Researchers found that synthetic cannabidiol (CBD) augments the anti-viral response of cells to three key proteins produced by the SARS-CoV-2 genome – which was, until now, an unknown effect.

The researchers studied these proteins in human kidney cellsboth alone and in combination with CBD, as well as the effects of CBD in healthy control cells.

“When cells in the lungs or the digestive tract are infected with a virus, they have an ability to sense and respond, even before the immune system notices a virus is present,” said Robin Duncan, lead investigator and a professor in the University of Waterloo’s Department of Kinesiology and Health Sciences. “They do this by activating innate responses inside of cells, which form the first line of defence. In the case of COVID-19, however, this response isn’t very good, which has contributed to high infection rates.

“With an RNA-type virus, like SARS-CoV-2, cells should activate an innate system that cuts up the viral genome, which also causes infected cells to undergo a process called apoptosis – a sort of controlled cell death that gets rid of infected cells early on. This could stop an infection, or slow its spread in the body or to others. When we combined CBD with these viral proteins, they had a much better ability to activate this system and to activate apoptosis.”

Duncan said what was potentially even more exciting, however, was that in cells that had not been exposed to the SARS-CoV-2 proteins, CBD in therapeutic amounts seemed to prime the innate anti-viral system of cells, increasing their readiness to respond to viral infection – and that this happened without activating apoptosis in healthy cells.

Waterloo’s postdoctoral fellow Maria Fernandes, who performed the cell studies, said, “This suggests CBD at the right dose could help cells be in a better state of readiness to respond to a virus, but it doesn’t cause a response unless there is a need.”

Duncan said this idea is supported by evidence from users of a high-dose pharmaceutical CBD licensed in the United States for the treatment of rare types of epilepsy. In that study, patients taking prescription high-dose CBD had around a 10-fold lower risk of testing positive for COVID-19.

Duncan points out that CBD does not cause a high, the way THC does, making it more widely useful.

The study, “Effect of cannabidiol on apoptosis and cellular interferon and interferon-stimulated gene responses to the SARS-CoV-2 genes ORF8, ORF10 and M protein,” is co-authored by Duncan, Fernandes, John Zewen Chan, Chia Chun Joey Hung and Michelle Tomczewski. A pre-peer-reviewed version is published on BioRxiv.org, and is under review in the journal Life Sciences.

The researchers said the discovery of this study is not meant to replace practices that are known to work in reducing the spread of COVID-19, such as masking, vaccination and other measures recommended by health experts.

Study Finds Cannabis Compounds Prevent Infection By Covid-19 Virus

Source: Forbes.com | Author: A.J. Herrington | Jan 11, 2022

Compounds in cannabis can prevent infection from the virus that causes Covid-19 by blocking its entry into cells, according to a study published this week by researchers affiliated with Oregon State University. A report on the research, “Cannabinoids Block Cellular Entry of SARS-CoV-2 and the Emerging Variants,” was published online on Monday by the Journal of Natural Products.

The researchers found that two cannabinoid acids commonly found in hemp varietals of cannabis, cannabigerolic acid, or CBGA, and cannabidiolic acid, also known as CBDA, can bind to the spike protein of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19. By binding to the spike protein, the compounds can prevent the virus from entering cells and causing infection, potentially offering new avenues to prevent and treat the disease.

“Orally bioavailable and with a long history of safe human use, these cannabinoids, isolated or in hemp extracts, have the potential to prevent as well as treat infection by SARS-CoV-2,” the researchers wrote in an abstract of the study.

The study was led by Richard van Breemen, a researcher with Oregon State’s Global Hemp Innovation Center in the College of Pharmacy and Linus Pauling Institute, in collaboration with scientists at the Oregon Health & Science University. Van Breeman said that the cannabinoids studied are common and readily available.

“These cannabinoid acids are abundant in hemp and in many hemp extracts,” van Breemen said, as quoted by local media. “They are not controlled substances like THC, the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana, and have a good safety profile in humans.”

End of article.

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Hemp experts say 2023 Farm Bill could even playing field between US and rival countries

Source: HempIndustryDaily.com | Author: Kate Lavin | Oct 21, 2021

Closing the gaps between the 2014 and 2018 Farm Bills could provide U.S. hemp companies with “a leg up on international trade,” according to Joy Beckerman, principal at New York-based Hemp Ace International.

Beckerman spoke Tuesday at the Hemp Industry Daily Forum, a daylong preconference event held in Las Vegas in connection with MJBizCon.

U.S. hemp companies looking to open new international markets may be eligible for government grants and programs to fund costs such as travel, said Larry Farnsworth, senior vice president of communications and marketing for the National Industrial Hemp Council.

Federal funds for such such business-development projects opened to hemp companies when the 2018 Farm Bill legalized the cultivation, processing and sale of hemp and hemp-derived products.

Trouble at home

Disparities between the 2014 and 2018 Farm Bill documents continue to create strife in the United States, however.

Regulators in some hemp markets adhere to rules from the 2014 Farm Bill, while others follow the 2018 document, making “some people think they are at a disadvantage to their neighboring states,” Farnsworth said.

Garrett Graff, partner at Moye White law firm in Denver, said he expects the 2023 Farm Bill to contain more harmonization of the two packages of federal legislation, along with further insight about testing rules required by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.

He also expects environmental, social and corporate governance to play a larger role in the updated Farm Bill.

In the nearer term, NIHC’s Farnsworth predicted the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives would affirm the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s authority over hemp. Meanwhile, Senate Bill 1698, the Hemp Access and Consumer Safety Act, stands to clarify that hemp-derived CBD can be included in dietary supplements and food.

Planning for 2023

For her part, Beckerman would like to see the federally legal plant treated as such going forward.

Additionally, she said the 2023 Farm Bill should make clear that naturally occurring cannabinoids are a part of federally legal hemp, meaning the sale and use of hemp-derived CBD and other cannabinoids in finished products should not be subject to criminal enforcement in the United States.

“We defined a plant in the Farm Bill. We didn’t define a finished product, but that is what we are dealing with,” she said.

Other key issues Beckerman would like clarified in the 2023 Farm Bill include a repeal of the drug felon ban, which precludes individuals convicted of certain drug crimes from growing hemp for 10 years, and the ability to repurpose hemp that tests above the 0.3% THC limit for construction materials, plastics and other purposes.

Hemp content at MJBizCon

The Hemp Industry Daily Forum was one of three preconference events held as part of MJBizCon at the Las Vegas Convention Center.

In addition to several dozen educational sessions, MJBizCon includes a trade show with more than 1,000 exhibitors for the cannabis industry. Register for MJBizCon at mjbizconference.com.