Around 120 Kentucky farmers will grow hemp this year as the state enters its second of five years of hemp research and testing as allowed under the Farm Bill.
Adam Watson, the industrial hemp program coordinator for the Kentucky Department of Agriculture, said though growing hemp commercially isn’t legal yet, there’s growing interest in the crop.
“We’re still at the beginning stages of research,” he said. “Today we can’t sit and tell you this is the most economical way to produce it or this is the best crop to be growing it for like seed versus fiber but what we have learned is there is a wide interest from industry.”
Watson said the hemp can be sold to processors to make hemp seed oil or cake that can be used as food.
He noted that, like all agricultural endeavors, there is risk based on weather and the market. Still, he said hemp is such a small percentage of the farmers’ production that there’s little risk involved.
“We’re still some years away from having a full blown industrial hemp industry,” Watson said. “It’s our hope and that of (Kentucky Agriculture) Commissioner Comer that with the completion of the Farm Bill five year program we’ll see an allowance at the federal level that will allow it to be legal.”
Watson said 326 farmers applied to grow the crop, and he is still working to finalize the farmers that will be allowed to do so.
(Image via Adrian Cable/Wikimedia Commons)