Exactly, for the most part it is just a non-issue. Companies could import hemp fiber if they wanted to, and they just don't. Why? Because so many companies have gotten really good at what they do.
Now I would imagine hemp might have a future as a product added to the mix, and time will tell on that one. Perhaps hemp fiber could be added to paper to create something. I don't know. Just right now no one has really seen the need even where the stuff is legal to grow.
In many ways the market has decided I guess, and that decision doesn't seem to sit well with some people.
This is, as usual, quite ludicrous. The market is not open and thus we do not know the possibilities.
If you read the state sponsored reports, there are several states that want the restrictions lifted and the product grown. But, you ignore that fact.
From the Kentucky report:
· Legal prohibition of Cannabis cultivation is the
overriding obstacle to reintroduction of fiber hemp
production in Kentucky. Significant progress on
agronomics, marketing, or infrastructure development
is unlikely, and of relatively little importance,
unless legal issues are resolved. Legislative action
would be required at both the state and federal
level. Such consideration would likely receive
strong diverse reactions from both private and public
sectors.
Which has been my point all along if you have actually read my posts. Nothing is going to happen until the legal restrictions are lifted. People would like to grow it, but there is no incentive to because of the Drug Warriors.
MolBasser