Pubdate: Wed, 19 Mar 2003 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2003 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawa/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Jennifer Campbell HEMP SHORTAGE THREATENS GROWING CONCERNS Ontario's Producers Have So Successfully Cracked The Mainstream Retail Market They Face A Supply Shortage Ontario hemp producers have a problem on their hands. As hemp-seed products move into the mainstream from health-food stores to Loblaws, the producers have become more successful at marketing than nailing down a supply of hemp seed from Ontario farmers who grow their raw materials. Back in 1998, the first year to grow commercial hemp in Canada, there was a lot of hype at the farming level and so many farmers grew hemp there was an oversupply. In the second year, a group called Consolidated Growers and Processors contracted upwards of 20,000 acres and then, according to Greg Herriott, president of Hempola Valley Farms, declared bankruptcy at harvest, again creating an oversupply. Farmers began to shy away from the crop, while producers used what they could from the glut. Until this year, supply kept pace with demand, but now that the products are really taking off, the producers face a supply shortage for the coming summer. "Through the winter, the products have been growing and gaining," said Gordon Scheifele, of G&GS Agricultural Services, a consulting and research company. "Many of the producers are going into Loblaws. Doors are opening for some serious marketing that requires larger quantities of grain to be processed. The same thing is happening in Manitoba, and there's a market developing in the United States. They're still not allowed to grow hemp grain there." Cool Hemp, a rapidly growing Killaloe company that produces a non-dairy frozen dessert with hemp, saw a 50-per-cent increase in sales in 2002 over 2001. Three years ago, the company was producing everything from Killaloe. Now it uses a large facility in Renfrew. Instead of transporting its frozen wares in the back of a truck, tucked into sleeping bags, it uses refrigerated trucks. Now it's looking for seed. "The farmers would like another cash crop, but they need to know there's a demand," said Robbie Anderman, co-founder of Cool Hemp. They got burned once, Mr. Herriott said, and are reluctant to come back. "The challenge is to responsibly, and based on bona fide market demand, create an industry from the field market upward," said Mr. Herriott, who's also on the board of the Ontario Hemp Alliance. "We have steady increases in demand for our products, and so do the others in the industry, but we need the raw material. There is concern out there. There's no question." Not everyone is suffering though. Ruth Shamai, a veteran producer in Toronto, has had no problems getting supplies from her growers, who are mostly from Saskatchewan. Her products, Ruth's Foods, are available at Loblaw's, as are Mr. Herriott's and Mr. Anderman's. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager