Pubdate: Thu, 04 Jan 2001 Source: Western Producer (CN SN) Copyright: 2001 The Western Producer Contact: Box 2500, Saskatoon, SK, Canada S7K 2C4 Fax: (306) 934-2401 Website: http://www.producer.com/ Author: Roberta Rampton, Winnipeg bureau Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hemp.htm (Hemp) HEMP OIL SALES IN JEOPARDY It took almost a year of persistent selling for Martine Carlina to convince a well-known American lip balm maker to use her company's organic hemp oil instead of a cheaper European variety. When the vice-president of Biohemp Technologies in Regina closed the deal for a dozen 204-litre drums with the Merry Hempsters of Eugene, Ore., she felt she was making inroads into established bulk hemp oil markets. But this spring, the Canadian government put a big detour sign in front of Carlina's marketing plans. Customs officials started stopping U.S.-made hemp cosmetic products at the border because they didn't come with documentation showing their levels of tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC. Health Canada regulations state hemp products must not contain more than 10 parts per million of THC, which is the psychoactive element in marijuana, the illegal cousin of hemp. THC levels in the Merry Hempsters' fruit-flavored lip balms are well under 10 ppm, said company president Gerry Shapiro, because they are made with Canadian hemp oil, which must also be under 10 ppm THC. He was surprised when his shipments of lip balms, which are sold in Canadian grocery and health food stores, were turned back at the border this spring. Shapiro had been exporting the lip balms to Canada without incident for more than four years. He said he can't afford to have every batch of each of his 23 products tested for THC, at a cost of $150 to $200 (US) per test. It doesn't make sense to test twice, added Carlina, noting Biohemp Technologies tests its oil for THC. Carlina and Shapiro believe Health Canada should accept imported products made with Canadian hemp oil providing a paper trail and affidavits accompany them. "We don't understand why something can't be worked out." She is lobbying Health Canada with the help of other hemp oil producers, cosmetics makers, distributors, retailers, and the Canadian Health Food Association. Health Canada spokesperson Roslynne Tremblay said the testing regulation has been in place since 1998. She said that without it, officials wouldn't know what's in the products. Hemp is still a "controlled substance," she added. Tremblay said she doesn't know regulatory enforcement seems to have changed this spring."It sounds as though there was a period of tolerance, maybe that could be it." Shapiro said government officials seem to be worried about THC accumulating in the body through lip balm, which he calls "bad science." "There is a lot of misinformation that rolls around bureaucratic circles regarding hemp." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake