We have teamed up with the NSW Government to establish a Hemp Industry Taskforce aimed at unlocking massive benefits.
The NSW Government is continuing work to future proof NSW Agriculture production and support growers across all sectors with the establishment of the Hemp Industry Taskforce.
The taskforce will include up to ten representatives from growers and industry associations and will consider options to support the continual growth of the NSW industrial hemp industry, supporting jobs in rural and regional NSW.
With the global hemp market expected to quadruple by 2027 to $18.7b, facilitating the expansion of the NSW industrial hemp sector is timely and critical.
Globally, hemp is used in more than 25,000 products spanning nine sub-markets, including agriculture, building materials and textiles.
At monthly meetings, supported by the NSW Department of Primary Industries, the taskforce will identify the short, medium and long-term objectives of the NW industrial hemp industry, including:
• The role industrial hemp could play in the transition to a net zero, circular economy in NSW.
• The supply and value chains required to support increased crop production, or other barriers to production and development in NSW.
• Identifying legislative barriers to and opportunities for expanding industrial hemp production in NSW. Consider opportunities to harmonise industrial hemp regulation nationally.
• Consider opportunities to harmonise industrial hemp regulation nationally.
The taskforce will only consider the range of legal use for the plants grown under the NSW Industrial Hemp Act 2008.
This taskforce will not consider the production of hemp for use as a therapeutic good (e.g., medicines) as this is restricted and requires a licence from the Office of Drug Control (Cwlth) and approval from the Therapeutic Goods Administration (Cwlth).
The development of this taskforce follows a NSW Hemp Industry Roundtable, hosted by Member of the NSW Legislative Council Jeremy Buckingham and attended by the Minister for Agriculture, Tara Moriarty in 2023.
Minister for Agriculture Tara Moriarty said:
“My attendance last year at the Hemp Industry Roundtable provided an important opportunity to hear from the hemp industry stakeholders and understand there are important gains for our state if we can foster the sector’s expansion.
“Currently, the Hemp Industry Act 2008 facilitates the cultivation and supply of low THC hemp fibre and seed production in NSW under controlled conditions, without compromising the effectiveness of existing drug enforcement strategies of the NSW Police.
“The Hemp Industry Regulation 2016 then authorises and regulates the cultivation and supply of low-THC hemp for commercial production and other legitimate uses.
“Guided by the taskforce outcomes, the Government can consider what work is required to reduce red tape and provide the regulatory environment to support the industrial hemp industry grow and deliver jobs to regional NSW.”
Jeremy Buckingham MLC said:
“The establishment of this taskforce is a game-changer for an industry that promises massive potential for jobs and farming in NSW.
“This is a plant which is up to 25 times more effective at capturing carbon than forestry, and which offers almost unlimited potential in a wide range of areas including clothing, construction, foodstuffs, paper, medication and more.
“I applaud the NSW Government for getting behind this industry and look forward to providing exciting new potential for manufacturing, a powerful transition for logging communities, and new opportunities for a climate and soil friendly crop for farmers.”
Background:
• NSW is home to 1,200 hectares of land dedicated to hemp cultivation, more than all other Australian states combined.
• The Hemp Industry Act 2008 was enacted on 1 July 2008 to kickstart growth of low-THC hemp production in NSW. Low-THC hemp is produced for use in a wide range of industrial, cosmetic, and technical products such as building materials and textiles.
• The NSW industrial hemp sector is highly regulated, with 99% compliance in 2022/23.