Fairtrade cannabis (serius)
Posted: 2019-02-22 03:14am
The tide of legalisation is rising, not just state to state but country to country. Big licensed farms in the Uk now, and there's too much profit for lawmakers to ignore it much longer, so I can see steady growth and accpetance through familairty.
0) I am assuming no particualr health risks
1) THE BIG ONE. Is there any legal way to move it between countries? Is there likely to be?
2) currently it's grown locally hydroponically, mostly becuase of patchy legislsation, well developed techniques and shorter production chains being easier to set up. Is this likely to remain the case? Tropics can grow it in the soil, at scale and with ease meaning cheaper bulk then hydroponics. Hemps felixibilty and durability is legenedary. I suspect that's comparing a durable shetland pony to a bred racehorse for commerical varieties, but there's probably a happy medium.
3) explotivie bannana republics are bad, and weed seems like the catergory as coffee - it needs processing to gian value, and the processed bud can be frozen/oiled and stored easily for a few years. This is putting middlemen in massive position of power over farmers. Much like coffee/tea, integrated plantations become welath extraction machines, and small farmers get nobbled. This is where fairtrade stepped in, and where fairtrade weed perhaps should too?
4) will the fairtrade foundation be willing to associate with it? They don't do tobacco. If not, will a free standing assoc be able to command the same trust?
0) I am assuming no particualr health risks
1) THE BIG ONE. Is there any legal way to move it between countries? Is there likely to be?
2) currently it's grown locally hydroponically, mostly becuase of patchy legislsation, well developed techniques and shorter production chains being easier to set up. Is this likely to remain the case? Tropics can grow it in the soil, at scale and with ease meaning cheaper bulk then hydroponics. Hemps felixibilty and durability is legenedary. I suspect that's comparing a durable shetland pony to a bred racehorse for commerical varieties, but there's probably a happy medium.
3) explotivie bannana republics are bad, and weed seems like the catergory as coffee - it needs processing to gian value, and the processed bud can be frozen/oiled and stored easily for a few years. This is putting middlemen in massive position of power over farmers. Much like coffee/tea, integrated plantations become welath extraction machines, and small farmers get nobbled. This is where fairtrade stepped in, and where fairtrade weed perhaps should too?
4) will the fairtrade foundation be willing to associate with it? They don't do tobacco. If not, will a free standing assoc be able to command the same trust?