From: davidson@homer.cs.unc.edu (Andrew Davidson)Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs,alt.drugs,talk.environment,sci.environmentSubject: Hemp paper in FranceDate: 24 Feb 91 22:22:42 GMTThe following article appeared in British journal New Scientist, November13, 1980.  It's pretty long, but there are some great facts in it.  Theinitial Anslinger quote actually appeared under a photo later in thearticle.  Reprinted without permission.  Typos are mine.----------------------------- Begin Article -----------------------------NO MARIHUANA:  PLENTY OF HEMPFrench farmers are doing well out of the growing market for hemp fibres.British farmers could face 14 years in jail if they followed suit.by Tim Malyon and Anthony Henman"Now this hemp is the finest fibre known to mankind, my God, if you everhave a shirt made out of it, your grandchildren would never wear it out.You take Polish families.  We used to see marijuana in the yards ofPolish families.  We'd go in and start to tear it up and the man came outwith his shotgun, yelling:  'These are my clothes for next winter.'"-- Harry J. Anslinger, former Commissioner, US Federal Bureau of NarcoticsEight thousand hectares of EEC-subsidised cannabis growing in France --it seemed inconceivable.  Our source of information, however, left littledoubt as to its accuracy.  The neat scientific pamphlets of theFederation Nationale des Producteurs de Chanvre (FNPC) could hardly beaccused of pandering to the pot culture.  Anxious to confirm the fact atfirst hand, we hopped on the early morning train out of Paris's GareMontparnasse, and two hours later were met in Le Mans by the researchofficer of the FNPC.  It was early in September, just as the harvest wasgetting into full swing.  With a justified pride in his achievement, ourcontact showed us out to the experimental fields, where acre upon acre ofthe French type of monoecious hemp(with male and female flowers on thesame plant) vied with the trial introductions of five-metre dioeciousplants (only one sex per plant) from Italy, and thick-set Lebanese bushesof the kind normally used for producing hashish.  Apart from these latterplants -- a mere dozen or so, grown exclusively for "comparativepurposes" -- we were assured that the rest of the crop had been subjectto selective breeding which reduced the levels of THC -- the psychoactiveingredient of cannabis -- to virtual insignificance.  On collecting a few"female flowering tops" and smoking them in Paris later that sameevening, we were forced to concede the truth:  French hemp is useless asa drug plant, and the smoking of even large quantities of it succeeded ingiving us a mild but irritating headache...Hemp's history in the service to human culture is as long as it isdiverse.  The Neolithic "Yang Shao" culture of China (4000 BC) isbelieved to have used the long fibrous strands on the outside of thecannabis stalk for rope and cloth.  According to Professor Hui-Lin Li, aneconomic botanist at the University of Pennsylvania, cannabis seeds, richin protein, "were considered, along with millet, rice, barley andsoybean, as one of the major grains of ancient China".  The first paperwas made of hempen rags, while the earliest pharmacopoeia in existence,the Pen-ts'ao-Ching, states that "the fruits of hemp...if taken in excesswill produce hallucinations [literally seeing devils].  If taken over along term, it makes one communicate with spirits and lightens one'sbody."  Writing in the 5th century BC, the Greek historian Herodotusdescribes how the Scythians would purge themselves after funerals byinhaling the smoke of hemp seeds thrown onto hot stones.  "The Scythiansenjoy it so much that they howl with pleasure..."  Linguistic evidenceindicates that in the original Hebrew and Aramaic texts of the OldTestament the "holy anointing oil" which God directed Moses to make(Exodus 30:23) was composed of myrrh, cinnamon, cannabis and cassia.PRECIOUS PLANTSUp to the middle of the last century France alone was cultivating morethan 100,000 hectares, whilst so precious was the plant in Tudor Englandthat Queen Elizabeth I exacted a bounty of 5 gold sovereigns on anyfarmer who did not cultivate it.  The reason for such a penalty wassimple:  hemp fibre is the strongest vegetable fibre known to man, andcan be grown easily and in a single six-month cycle from April toSeptember.  Before the introduction of tropical sisals and Manila hemp,it was essential for the rope and canvas (the very word derived fromcannabis, according to the OED) used to outfit the Navy.  An Americancommentary on the 1764 Hemp Law governing importation from "His Majesty'scolonies into Great Britain" notes the necessity to "render their mothercountry independent of certain northern powers (mainly the Baltic States)upon whom her former dependence, for a supply of naval stores, has beenfrequently very precarious".This strategic aspect of cannabis as a basic fibre source reappeared fora short while during the Second World War.  In the wake of Pearl Harbourand the Japanese invasion of the Philippines, the US was cut off from itssupplies of Manila rope and twine, and made considerable efforts torevive its by then sagging hemp trade.  Planters' manuals were rapidlyreprinted, and the estimated area under cultivation increased from 585hectares in 1939 to 59,500 hectares in 1943.  By 1946 the total haddropped back to 1950 hectares and the industry was on its way toextinction in the industrial West.A number of factors combined to bring about this state of affairs.  Theproduction of high-quality hemp fibre is a labour-intensive business.The hemp stalks must be dried in the field, then transported to a"retting pit" where they are left in water for several days to start theprocess of separating the fibre from the woody core (known as hurds) ofthe stalk.  The retted plants are then taken back to the farm to be driedout in building similar to hop oast houses.  The stalks are passedthrough what is essentially a large mangle separating fibre from brokenhurd.  The hurds are then shaken out, and after "scutching and heckling"(a process of cleaning and separating individual strands) the long,strong fibres are ready for spinning and weaving.  In a pre-industrialsociety, the bulk of this work could be carried out during the winterwhen farmers had little to do.  With the importation of cheap tropicalfibres and the demise of the sail, however, such labour-intensive work nolonger proved financially viable.  A mechanical hemp "breaker" wasintroduced in the early 1900s, but it had arrived too late to save atrade which by then was having to cope with international cannabisprohibition and a new image for the plant, from essential crop toassassin of youth.Synthetic textiles also helped hasten hemp's decline, as so, too, did the19th century introduction of the chemical woodpulping process.  Asalready mentioned, hemp textiles were one essential source for rag paper.After the Second World War, for instance, Robert Fletcher and Sons, thepaper manufacturer owned by the Imperial Tobacco Group, bought up largestocks of Nazi concentration camp uniforms made from hemp, which itconverted into paper.  Since then, Fletchers has stopped using textilesfor paper because it is almost impossible to obtain them free ofsynthetic materials which wreak havoc on the machinery.  It now importsraw hemp fibres from France.For, curiously enough, as wood-pulp paper replaced rag paper and hemptextile products disappeared from the market, a new process was beingdeveloped in France that used the raw hemp fibres for the production ofhigh-quality, strong papers.  The fibre is extremely resilient and idealfor the manufacture of cigarette paper, which must combine high tensilestrength with extreme lightness.  Fibre for paper is cheaper to producethan fibre for textiles, because it needs neither to be as long nor ofsuch high quality.  Paralleling the growth in the consumption of illicit,high-THC forms of cannabis, the new hemp cigarette paper industry waslaunched in the early 1960s in France, and established its presentprominence in the halcyon years between 1967 and 1971.  Statistics show adecline in the area of French cannabis sown for textiles from 1084hectares in 1961 to 147 hectares in 1968, the last year for whichofficial records of this type of cultivation exist.  In contrast, areasdedicated to paper production increased from 61 hectares in 1961 to 3181hectares in 1968, peaking at 10,595 hectares in 1977.The growth of this new market for the pant in France was accompanied by aradical restructuring of the economics of the hemp business.  Though afew farmers grow the crop principally for the sake of the subsidies theyreceive (1405 francs per hectare last year), the bulk of currentproduction comes from mechanised concerns with high levels ofproductivity.  One of the great advantages of hemp for farmers lies inits use as a rotation crop, breaking up the soil with its deep rootsystem and also eliminating weeds, thus leaving the land ready for thedirect sowing of a winter wheat crop before the arrival off the firstfrosts.  An enthusiastic response to this potential has brought about thelarge-scale introduction of hemp into areas where it was nottraditionally cultivated, and in Bar-sur-Aube, for instance, 200 kmsouth-east of Paris, a flourishing cooperative has been established torepresent the interests of part of the new hemp agribusiness.  There, 93farmers helped finance their own breaking mill which 1978 was processing2500 hectares of hemp.SREAMLINED MECHANISATIONA certain amount of trade secrecy surrounds the exact mechanicalprocesses involved in "breaking" the dried hemp stalks and separatingbast fibre -- the phloem fibres, most suitable for paper production -->from the woody hurds.  The director of the Bar-sur-Aube cooperativepolitely refused us saying that as he sold 20 per cent of his product toEngland, he did not wish to encourage "English competition".  The DeMauduit mill likewise refused to receive us, even though the FNPCintervened in our behalf.Their reticence is understandable.  It is streamlined mechanisation inthe breaking mills which has made the production of crude bast fibre forpaper much more cost-effective when undertaken on a large industrialscale.  Not surprisingly this new system has led to an ever-increasingcentralisation of the hemp business.  Various small mills were involvedin the early 1960s, but in the past decade the field has narrowed to twomajor concerns, besides the Bar-sur-Aube cooperative.  One is therelatively traditional Job cigarette paper company in Toulouse, and theother the giant De Mauduit factory in Quimperle, which has prevailed overall its competitors in the main hemp-growing areas of central andnorth-eastern France.  Its aggressive business acumen -- De Mauduit isactually a subsidiary of the US paper multinational Kimberly Clark whomakes Kleenex tissues -- is based upon a fine understanding of theprofitability of the trade:  French farmers receive 435 francs per tonnefor the dried hemp stalks and De Mauduit charges 2500 francs for theprepared bast paper fibre, for which the British paper maker ends uppaying L650 per tonne.  De Mauduit's treated paper fibre, hemp pulpboard, costs an astonishing 6500 francs per tonne.Since the break mills have a virtually monopoly, the FNPC in Le Mans islooking for ways of diversifying the market for the hemp its membersproduce.  Research is being undertaken into the possibility of includinga proportion of hemp in various courser grades of paper, includingwrapping paper, as a means of increasing strength.  Some printing papermanufacturers, including the company that produces the glossy pages ofParis Match, are considering introducing a proportion of hemp into theirpaper pulp.  So far the only indication that British companies other thanRobert Fletcher and Sons are actively researching hemp's paper potentialcomes from the Manchester University's Department of Paper Science, whichrefused to divulge information on recent work in this area because ofwhat information it had was a "trade secret".Further potential for hemp in paper manufacture involves utilising theplant's woody core, the hurds.  While the average fibre yield per hectareis approximately 185 kg, fully two-and-a-half tonnes of hurds areproduced from the same area.  These are now being sold for animal beddingand for producing building boards with good sound-proofing properties.As far back as 1916, however, the US Department of Agriculture carriedout a number of semi-commercial tests on the use of hurds for paperproduction and concluded:  "After several trials, under conditions oftreatment and manufacture which are regarded as favourable in comparisonwith those used with wood pulp, paper was produced which received veryfavourable comment both from investigators and from the trade and whichaccording to official tests would be classed as No. 1 machine finishprinting paper."  Not only could hemp hurds compete with wood pulp oncost and quality, but they were also found to be far more economical interms of land use.  "Every tract of of 10,000 acres which is devoted tohemp raising year by year is equivalent to a sustained pulp-producingcapacity of 40,500 acres of average pulp-wood lands."  Despite a 1977Italian study which found that this usage remained commercially viable,paper companies are apparently disregarding the potential for hurds, eventhough paper production from hurds is much less polluting than from woodpulp.  Hemp hurds contain on average 4 per cent lignin, as opposed to18-30 per cent in wood, and it is the effluent resulting from washing outthe lignin that causes the most pollution in the chemical pulpingprocess.Some thought is now going into researching non-paper applications forhemp products.  At present seeds (farmers receive 10 francs per kg;average yield is 50 kg/ha) have a limited use, being sold mainly asanimal feed, bird food and anglers' bait.  However, cannabis seedscontain 30-45 per cent high protein oil, which is edible, or may be usedin future in paint production.The French hemp industry is of course entirely disregarding cannabis'textile potential, despite the fact that in Brittany some small farmersstill produce hempen sheets and other hard-wearing cloth for their ownuse.  We were informed in France that the production of the high qualityfibres required for textiles remains prohibitively costly and that ropeand sacking are imported from Eastern Bloc countries where labour costsremain lower.  Scottish hemp fibre importers obtain a large percentage oftheir material from Poland.  According to our research, the finest hempcloth has always been produced by the Chinese and Italians, andYugoslavia, India and Japan are still producing hemp textiles, the latterin combination with synthetic fibres.What might be the future for revitalised hemp fibre industry in the UK?Certainly, the British paper-makers could not but welcome any attempt toundercut prices they pay for imported hemp, but in order to achieve this,considerable capital must be invested in British breaking mills.However, what is possible of more interest than the now established useof fibre for high quality paper is the future of hemp fibre in textiles.Given careful preparation, high-quality hemp cloth can be produced inBritain that is both comfortable and more durable than any other naturaltextile.  A hemp/wool mix was once widely used in France, being knowngenerically as berlinge.  Demand is growing for durable natural fibreproducts where the public will pay a somewhat higher price for a superiorproduct.  Certain clothing manufacturers in the US have expressed aninterest in hemp jeans (Levi Strauss's original jeans were made fromhempen sailcloth), while the outdoor equipment industry is also returningwhere possible to natural fibres, and hemp might be ideal in, forinstance, specialist mountaineering backpacks.  Given the mess in whichthe British textile industry finds itself, such innovative ideas couldwell bear fruit, particularly if the technology can be developed from theexisting machinery in the linen industry to keep the cost of preparingweaving quality hemp fibre within reasonable limits.All this, of course, presumes a more sensible government attitude toBritish cultivation laws.  (Cannabis stalks and seeds are already legal,and can be safely imported.)  While international law governing cannabiscultivation makes a specific exemption for industrial uses, no suchexemption exists in British law, and growers must obtain their official,low-THC seed directly from the FNPC, informing the Ministries of Healthand Agriculture of their intentions.  Such a model could easily beintroduced into this country in conformity with the Common AgriculturePolicy.  Since the rapid expansion of the French industry furnishes proofof profit potential, British farmers might be justifiably annoyed atbeing threatened with a 14 year jail sentence for growing a plant,generously subsidised by the EEC on the continent, from which theirFrench neighbours are making good money.  Or perhaps Her Majesty'sgovernment should sue the EEC commissioners for conspiring to aid andabet a criminal offence?------------------------------ End Article ------------------------------Freedom, Drew-- Drew Davidson        \\     HELP FULLY INFORM JURORS!  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