Hemp Cultivation in China

The situation in China:

BRIGHTSUN INT'L TRADING CO. LTD
27G JINSUI MASION 379 PUDONG SOUTH RD
SHANGHAI
CHINA

TEL 0086 21 50540311
FAX 0086 21 58769500

EMAIL: product26@keytochina.net

Dear Sirs,

We are a leading manufacturer and exporter of hemp linen and ramie fabrics in China. Our fabrics were given high awards by our government for the high quality this year. Would you have any interest in our fabrics, please contact us. 

Best regards,

Sogo.tam


SOURCE: Asiaweek
PUBDATE: August 15, 1997
CONTACT: editors@asiaweek.com
NEWSHAWK: chris.clay@hempnation.com

Cannabis Couture Is Cool
And the fabric comes from a Chinese village
By Ron Gluckman
/ Dongping

AMERICAN ACTOR WOODY HARRELSON wears it. Fashion mogul Georgio Armani flogs it. Tens of millions smoke a derivative, while scores of Internet sites and groups argue its merits. Hemp is back in fashion -- and much of it is coming from tiny Dongping in China, where most folk have no idea their product is causing ructions half a world away.

It all started when Western investors spent $12 million to refit a Dongping textile plant. Since the factory reopened in January, the working-class hamlet in Shandong province has won global notoriety as the planet's leading supplier of hemp, a cousin of the illegal marijuana plant and the trendiest weed since tobacco.

Estimates of the world hemp market range from $50-$150 million a year. That is a pittance compared with the billions that go up in smoke every year in pipes. But no one can dispute that hemp is happening. Trade has grown at least ten-fold since 1990, and advocates believe the market has barely been tapped.

In the face of opposition by politicians who fear booming production will fuel the supply of illegal drugs, entrepreneurs in China, Europe and the U.S. are pushing hemp as an ideal raw material for a wide variety of manufactured goods. Proponents cite it as a fast-growing, high-quality source of paper products that could offset ravenous demand for the world's dwindling timber supplies. An Australian firm, Wavelite Express, uses hemp as a substitute for fiberglass in surfboards. Adidas has experimented with hemp shoes. German and British companies make hemp candy, beer and energy bars. Even hemp-seed oil is used for lubrication, cooking and cosmetics. In five years, says hemp advocate Michael Rich, the industry could be worth $1 billion.

That would be a big payoff for China, far and away the leading producer even after a drastic drop in hemp production in recent decades. Hemp, and the cellulose that comes from its fibrous stalk, has been in wide use for centuries and was once a common component in thousands of products, from dynamite to cellophane. But the last 50 years brought the rise of synthetic alternatives. That, plus the backlash from anti-marijuana campaigns, has snuffed out meaningful cash crop cultivation in most of the world. China's annual hemp production topped 100,000 tons in 1980, but fell to less than one-tenth that over the following 10 years. Aside from use as clothing and bags by ethnic tribes in places like Yunnan province and Xinjiang region, China mainly relegated hemp to such low-end uses as pipe insulation and livestock feed bags.

Nowadays, hemp is being revived by environmental activists -- they appreciate its ability to thrive with little water or fertilizer -- and the fashionmeisters, many of whom tout it as better than cotton. "Hemp is a marvelous material," says a spokesman for Armani. "It's cool in the summer and warm in winter." The only problem: limited supplies of sufficient quality.

That may be changing. "Traditionally, hemp has been considered a rough material, the kind of thing you would only use in backpacks or for hippie shorts," says Douglas Mignola, owner of Amsterdam's Hempworks, one of Europe's biggest hemp apparel makers. "China changed all that and revolutionized the industry."

The key is a patented process, developed by Chinese scientists more than a decade ago, that uses a variety of washes and acid treatments to produce a cloth as soft as cotton but with five times the strength. The procedure might have gone nowhere were it not for Rich. Working in Amsterdam to help expand the market for hemp oil, the American was surfing the Internet when he came upon a citation for Chinese scientists who won an award for textile innovation.

Rich set about commercializing his find. Using his Amsterdam-based Naturetex International as a vehicle, he formed a joint venture with mainland partners. They converted an underused cotton factory into the Dongping Hemp Mill. It employs over 2,000 and can churn out five million square meters of hemp fabric a year.

When the mill reopened in January, Dongping citizens held a parade and stretched banners across streets. "Welcome to our partners in cannabis production," stated one. And therein lies the crux of the hempsters' PR problem: It is hard to convince the anti-drug forces that hemp really is harmless because it contains minute traces of delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the substance that gets people high.

"Everyone asks the question," says Mignola. "No, you cannot smoke hemp clothes." Yet, even minute traces are enough to make hemp cultivation illegal throughout much of the world. Says a frustrated Rich: "We don't mix dope and rope. It's about business. It's not about politics or marijuana. It's about money." He gets no argument from the Dongping mill's gainfully employed workers. Many can be seen sporting their hempwear like a badge of honor. That's a trend that Rich hopes will spread like a weed.

Hemp Nation * http://www.hempnation.com/ Chris Clay * E-mail chris.clay@hempnation.com


In China industrial Hemp is cultivated throughout the country. Most cultivars used in China are a blend of many unknown indigenous strains classified as landraces. China is one of the few remaining countries that has a large scale traditional Hemp industry still fully alive. This is a result of low wages leading to a competitive edge in this labor intensive industry.


Do you know more about this? e-mail us at Matthew@HempWorld.com


Hemp facts and links related to China:

The earliest record of man's use of hemp comes from Taiwan. Archeologists have unearthed an ancient village of over 10'000 years old. There they found broken pieces of pottery that had been decorated by pressing strips of hemp-cord into it.

Hemp occupies an important place in Chinese culture, from ancient times to now. The “Book of Rites” (2nd century B.C.) ordained that out of respect for the dead, mourners should wear clothes made from hemp fabric. This custom is followed even today!

Ma, the Chinese word for hemp, is composed of two symbols which are meant to depict hemp:

The part beneath and to the right of the straight lines represent hemp fibers dangling from a rack. The horizontal and vertical lines represent the home in which they were drying.


PAPER FOR
THE LONG HAUL*

Hemp was the world's first source of paper; invented in China around 100 B.C. Two-thousand-year-old pieces of hemp paper have stood the test of time, a feat far beyond the capabilities of wood pulp paper. In fact if wood pulp had been the source of paper throughout history, it is terrifying to think of the history and literature we would know nothing about, for-until the development of acidtree paper-wood pulp paper disintegrated after little more than a century. A return to hemp paper would make the acid-free paper process unnecessary. Hemp paper is also stronger than wood pulp paper, naturally pliable, and partially water-resistant.*

*Note: From “The Hemp Manifesto” by Rowan Robinson (Email: hemp@gotoit.com), published by Park Street Press, an imprint of Inner Traditions International, Rochester, VT  05767  Copyright © 1997, Inner Traditions International. Or visit: www.gotoit.com


*Industrial-Hemp has no psychoactive properties following definition of the European Economic Community (EEC); THC content is less than 0.3%. In general, low THC-seed varieties without psychoactive properties are those that have a THC content of less than 1%. (See also No-THC Hemp-seed.) THC= Delta-9 TetraHydroCannabinol.

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