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A MEMORIAL
REQUESTING THE NEW MEXICO STATE UNIVERSITY BOARD OF REGENTS TO
STUDY THE VIABILITY OF A LEGAL HEMP INDUSTRY; URGING CONGRESS
TO RECOGNIZE INDUSTRIAL HEMP AS A VALUABLE AGRICULTURAL
COMMODITY AND TO TAKE CERTAIN OTHER ACTIONS.
WHEREAS, industrial hemp refers to varieties of Cannabis
that have less than three-tenths of one percent
tetrahydrocannabinol, are genetically distinct from drug
varieties of Cannabis and are cultivated exclusively for
fiber, stalk and seed; and
WHEREAS, industrial hemp should not be confused with
varieties of Cannabis that have high concentrations of
tetrahydrocannabinol and are commonly referred to as
marijuana; and
WHEREAS, industrial hemp is commercially produced in
more than thirty nations, including Canada, Great Britain,
France, Germany, Romania, Australia and China; and
WHEREAS, annual sales of hemp food in the United States
are growing rapidly and industrial hemp seed prices are good
and yield is medium to high; and
WHEREAS, in Canada, without irrigation, eight hundred
pounds of seed per acre is average, and with irrigation,
yields may increase to one thousand six hundred to two
thousand pounds per acre; and
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WHEREAS, industrial hemp is a high-value, low-input crop
that is not genetically modified, requires no pesticides, can
be dryland farmed and uses less fertilizer than wheat and
corn; and
WHEREAS, many farmers view industrial hemp as a
versatile and valuable agricultural commodity that will have
long-term economic benefits to the farmers who produce the
hemp and the persons who use hemp in the production of twine,
rope, textiles, paper products, building materials, including
plywood, concrete, insulation and roofing, animal bedding,
automobile parts, plastics, fuel, including biodiesel and
butanol, cosmetics, foods, nutritional supplements, body care
products and more;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE HOUSE OF
REPRESENTATIVES OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO that the New Mexico
state university board of regents be urged to undertake an
in-depth economic analysis study that will address the
viability of a legal hemp industry in New Mexico. The New
Mexico state university board of regents is urged to review
the long-term impacts of a permitted hemp industry and the
costs of establishing proper permitting and licensing
procedures. The economic analysis study shall attempt to
determine the costs and benefits associated with encouraging
economic development in various areas, including textiles,
pulping products for paper, biocomposites and building
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materials, animal bedding, nutritional products for livestock,
industries related to seed extraction and resins for potential
biofuels, lubricants, paints and inks, cosmetics, body care
products and nutritional supplements; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the United States congress
be urged to recognize industrial hemp as a valuable
agriculture commodity, to define industrial hemp in federal
law as a non-psychoactive and genetically identifiable species
of the genus Cannabis and acknowledge that allowing and
encouraging farmers to produce industrial hemp will improve
the balance of trade by promoting domestic sources of
industrial hemp and can make a positive contribution to the
issues of global climate change and carbon sequestration;
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that copies of this memorial be
transmitted to the dean of the college of agriculture and home
economics, the president of the United States, the federal
secretary of agriculture, the chair of the United States
senate committee on agriculture, nutrition and forestry, the
chair of the United States house of representatives committee
on agriculture and each member of New Mexico's congressional
delegation.