The Biggest Medical Marijuana Facility in Southeast Asia
BANGKOK, Thailand -- Thailand has built what's described
as the
biggest industrial-scale medical marijuana
facility in Southeast Asia
with 12,000 plants, and will
soon allow everyone to grow six cannabis
plants "in their
back gardens like any other herb."
Recreational use
remains illegal with punishments including
imprisonment.
Enthusiasts hope the disappearing resistance
to
marijuana's medical use will result in looser laws for
public
enjoyment and business profits.
Those changes appear to be gaining momentum.
Government officials attended a ceremony in northern Thailand's Chiang Mai in September where Maejo University researchers planted 12,000 new marijuana sprouts.
The promising shoots are inside a
newly built 32,722-square-foot
(3,040-square-meter)
greenhouse with controls for temperature,
moisture and
light.
Seeds for the 12,000 plants were provided by the government's Department of Medical Service.
Officials expect the plants will produce medical-grade cannabis flowers and buds within six months.
The Government Pharmaceutical Organization (GPO) hopes to use those ingredients to make one million bottles of cannabis oil, each containing five milliliters, by February 2020.
"These are historic first steps on the path towards allowing people to grow six cannabis trees in their homes," said newly appointed Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul. "In the near future, families will be able to plant it in their back gardens like any other herb.
"The university will be a center where ordinary people can learn how to plant and grow good quality cannabis. Cannabis is not an issue of politics, it is a product that can benefit people's health," he said, planting a sprout while wearing a white lab coat.
Mr. Anutin led his small, newly formed Bhumjai Thai (Proud to be Thai) party's campaign earlier this year during parliamentary elections by promising each household could grow six plants.
By selling each mature plant to the government for $2,225, a family could earn $13,350 for all six, he told voters.
Foreign experts warn not every plant produces medical-grade cannabis, and the ones that do are difficult to raise.
Amateurs could produce average weed, but without investing money and taking time to tend to the plants, those crops would not qualify for the government to purchase for medical use.
If recreational marijuana is allowed, then private growers could profit easier because quality requirements would be less strict.
Mr. Anutin predicted fully legalized marijuana would be a bigger and more lucrative crop for Thailand than rice, sugarcane, tapioca, rubber or other produce.
Thailand's low wages
would boost its ability to compete in
international
markets against big foreign cannabis companies
where
operating costs are higher.
Potential
up-and-coming rivals in Latin America, Africa and
elsewhere
in Asia however could outgrow Thailand which
would need to create
niche strains to sell abroad,
foreign experts said.
Maejo University reportedly
developed a marijuana strain it calls
"Issara"
(Independence). It offers equal percentages of
cannabidiol
(CBD) and tetrahydrocannabinol
(THC).
Future strains will offer differing percentages of
CBD and THC to
treat illnesses and symptoms requiring
other ratios.
Officials hope more Thai universities, labs,
agricultural experts and
botanists will produce
additional local strains.
"We have plans to extend the
cannabis-growing to outdoor areas too,
which is likely to
be suitable for the local strains that are found in
many
parts of the country," director of the Maejo Natural
Farming
Research and Development Center said, according
to the Bangkok Post.
At least 13 hospitals have reportedly
received licenses to dispense
cannabis extracts to
patients with prescriptions.
A classroom inside a hospital
in Pranchin Buri recently began teaching
the public how
to grow medical-grade marijuana.
"This training course
consists of both classroom lectures and
practical
sessions in closed-farming plots," Chaophraya
Abhaibhubejhr
Hospital's director Namphol Danpipat
said.
"We aim to provide students with optimal growing
techniques that will
yield the best quality cannabis for
medical purposes," Mr. Namphol
said according to local
media.
The training course was titled: "Medical Cannabis
Organic Farming for
Agriculturists and the General
Public."
Teachers will instruct students how patients can
use CBD and THC, how
to prevent fungus and pest damage,
and what government regulations
must be obeyed to produce
marijuana for medical use.
Thais have been growing weed
for hundreds of years for traditional
purposes for
illnesses, relaxation, recipes and entertainment.
Strict
medical quality is a new concept.
Thailand's
legendary, mind-bending "Thai Sticks" strain of
illegal
weed was hailed among the U.S. and international
counterculture during
the 1960s and 70s. But it was
rarely developed into better strains
with varying
percentages of ingredients.
Countless other strains have
been developed during recent years in the
U.S., Canada,
Europe and other foreign countries.
As a result, Thailand
trails far behind other countries where medical
and
recreational marijuana has been legalized and developed to
produce
an array of foreign strains with CBD and THC
levels suitable for
medical use.
"Most Thai marijuana
strains contain more THC than CBD, which makes
them more
suitable for recreational use," GPO director
Withoon
Danwiboon said in May.
Concerned about foreign
competition, Thailand approved a $4 million
budget in
August to expand government-controlled marijuana farms
for
medical purposes.
Last month, Thailand announced
that its first relatively small
pharmaceutical laboratory
produced CBD and THC oils, tablets, oral
sprays,
chocolate wafers and traditional potions for medical use.
They
proudly displayed the lab's tiny garden of 72
plants.
***
Richard S. Ehrlich is a Bangkok-based
journalist from San Francisco,
California, reporting news
from Asia since 1978 and winner of Columbia
University's
Foreign Correspondent's Award. He co-authored
three
non-fiction books about Thailand, including "'Hello
My Big Big Honey!'
Love Letters to Bangkok Bar Girls and
Their Revealing Interviews," "60
Stories of Royal
Lineage," and "Chronicle of Thailand: Headline News
Since
1946." Mr. Ehrlich also contributed to the chapter
"Ceremonies
and Regalia" in a book published in English
and Thai titled, "King
Bhumibol Adulyadej, A Life's Work:
Thailand's Monarchy in
Perspective." Mr. Ehrlich's newest
book, "Sheila Carfenders, Doctor
Mask & President Akimbo"
portrays a 22-year-old American female mental
patient who
is abducted to Asia by her abusive San
Francisco
psychiatrist.
His online sites are:
https://asia-correspondent.tumblr.com
https://flickr.com/photos/animists/albums
https://www.amazon.com/Hello-Big-Honey-Revealing-Interviews/dp/1717006418
https://www.amazon.com/Sheila-Carfenders-Doctor-President-Akimbo/dp/1973789353/
https://www.facebook.com/SheilaCarfenders