JAMAICA-128 small ganja farmers to get support from the government.

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KINGSTON, Jamaica, CMC – Sixteen communities and approximately 128 small traditional cannabis farmers will be targeted for support over the next three to four years under a program that aims to eliminate illicit cultivation of cannabis by transitioning farmers into the legally regulated industry.

Minister of Industry, Investment, and Commerce, Senator Aubyn Hill, says communities participating in the Alternative Development Programme 2.0 can cultivate up to 10 acres of land.

“Each participating community will be required to sell output to a person who has a license from the Cannabis Licensing Authority, and we expect that to be in place by April 2023,” he said as he outlined assistance for small farmers in the medical cannabis industry.

Senator Hill highlighted further support through the mother farm concept. This is a shared economy approach in which a licensed cannabis cultivator or processor agrees with a small-scale/traditional farmer to cultivate the crop and sell it back to the mother farm/licensee.

“When I look across Jamaica… you have people with one acre, two acres, three acres, but they don’t have the working capital. The mother farm concept allows for a big investor,” the Minister explained.

“So, we’re finding ways to alleviate some of the problems. We’re looking at real ways to develop medical cannabis growth in Jamaica.”

A release from the Ministry also stated that efforts are being made to have medical cannabis designated as an industrial/agricultural crop through the amendment of the Agricultural Produce Act.

Addressing the importation of cannabis from Canada, which several players in the local industry have expressed concern about, Minister Hill clarified that Cannaviva Jamaica Limited imported only 44 pounds of cannabis. The particular strain, tranquil tremendous, is not found on the island.

He added that since 2018, Jamaica had exported 1,608 pounds of cannabis.

“So, as an exporting country, we have much to benefit from, and… we want to export more. We want this industry to grow more,” Hill said.

He advised that in May, he will lead a trade mission to Canada, where the cannabis issue will be on the agenda.

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