hemp act industry reactions no one will grow a c 6

HEMP Act Industry Reactions: ‘No One Will Grow a Crop That Might Be Illegal in November’

CED Clinical Relevance
#15 Clinical Context
Background information relevant to the evolving cannabis medicine landscape.
PolicyHempCBDIndustry
Why This Matters
Hemp farmers must decide right now what to plant for 2026, but nobody can tell them whether their crop will be legal by the time it’s harvested in November.
Clinical Summary

Industry stakeholders weigh in on the HEMP Act. AHPA President Graham Rigby calls it a ‘starting point’ that must prioritize consumer safety through rigorous scientific assessment. Jonathan Miller of the US Hemp Roundtable warns that without an extension, there will be ‘tremendous disruption up and down the food chain, particularly for farmers.’ Planting decisions for 2026 must be made well before regulatory outcomes are known. The 50-state patchwork continues causing confusion.

Dr. Caplan’s Take
“Asking a farmer to invest an entire growing season in a crop that Congress might criminalize before harvest isn’t a policy gap,it’s a moral failing.”
Clinical Perspective

ANCIENT ENZYMES, MODERN MEDICINE: WHAT WAGENINGEN’S CANNABIS DISCOVERY MEANS

Researchers at Wageningen University published a breakthrough in Nature that reframes our understanding of cannabis biochemistry. They identified ancestral enzymes in cannabis that produce CBC (cannabichromene)โ€”a cannabinoid most consumers have never heard ofโ€”as potentially the plant’s original cannabinoid.

The implications are significant. Modern cannabis has been bred almost exclusively for THC and CBD production. But the evolutionary history of the plant suggests CBC and other minor cannabinoids were the primary output for millions of years. These ancestral pathways were suppressed by selective breeding, not eliminated.

The team used molecular phylogenetics to reconstruct the evolutionary history of cannabinoid synthase enzymes, demonstrating that the CBC pathway predates both THCA and CBDA synthesis. In practical terms, this means the enzymes that produce CBC are more genetically stable and potentially more efficient.

For the cannabinoid industry, this opens a door: if CBC production can be optimized using these ancestral enzymesโ€”whether in planta or via biosynthesisโ€”it could unlock commercial-scale production of a cannabinoid with documented anti-inflammatory, analgesic, and neuroprotective properties.

This is the kind of research that reminds us why the regulatory debate matters. Without legal clarity, American researchers and companies can’t capitalize on discoveries like this. The science is advancing. The law is retreating.

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