Pubdate: Tue, 01 Aug 2000 Source: Otago Daily Times (New Zealand) Copyright: Allied Press Limited, 2000 Contact: P.O. Box 181, 52-66 Lower Stuart Street, Dunedin, New Zealand Website: http://www2.odt.co.nz Author: Prester John, Talk of the Times, Headline by newshawk. Non-drug part snipped. FINALLY, WE MAY INVESTIGATE CENTURIES-OLD USES FOR HEMP Finally, we . . . AMID the fear over allowing hemp, or cannabis, to be grown in New Zealand, people often overlook the fact the plant has been grown for industrial purposes for thousands of years. The Chinese are believed to have first made paper from hemp about 2000 years ago. New Zealand Customs officials have been cleared to negotiate a start to hemp trials but Government approval would be needed to grow it commercially ( ODT , 28.7.00). . . . may investigate . . . ADVOCATES of the crop point out its wide variety of industrial uses. Green MP Nandor Tanczos attracted widespread publicity this year when he had a suit made of hemp, but the plant has been used for clothing for centuries. It can be woven into many grades, from canvas to fine linen. With the right processing, hemp can be made softer than cotton and, some say, more absorbent. Towels, nappies, baby clothing, upholstery fabric, table linen, casual clothing and high quality linen wear are all potential hemp uses. . . . centuries-old . . . BEFORE the 1800s, hemp, rather than wood, was commonly used for making paper and at the start of the last century there were thoughts of using hemp for newsprint. Soon after World War 1, American newspaper magnate Edward Scripps became interested in a machine that processed the long, tough hemp fibres into fine grade newsprint, but for various reasons it never progressed. Since then, technology has improved - there are hemp paper mills in China and India - and one reader's idea ( ODT letters, 24.7.00) of using the mothballed Mataura paper mill to trial and make hemp paper may not be as far-fetched as some might initially believe. . . . uses for . . . UNFORTUNATELY, whenever cannabis is mentioned, most of us tend to think of only one hemp variety - the mind-altering type, usually from India ( Cannabis Indica ). But there are other varieties practically without psycho-active properties which have industrial uses. Britain lifted its ban on industrial hemp cultivation in 1993. It can be used as a useful companion crop, but the main use there is for livestock bedding. Other hemp uses are quite impressive and extensive - as fire resistant material, in fibreboard, concrete reinforcement, as a paint additive (it is said to improve viscosity and paint strength) - just to name a few. . . . hemp THE link between hemp, clothing and paper is illustrated in a macabre story about British paper manufacturer Robert Fletcher and Sons which at the end of World War 2 bought Nazi concentration camp uniforms made of hemp and turned them into rag paper. (snip) - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk