With California’s landmark Assembly and Senate passage of
sweeping marijuana regulations this month, as the Medical Marijuana Regulation
and Safety Act heads for an eager pen of Gov. Brown, the state’s $1.15 billion
marijuana market (BIS Research, September 1) – which is the largest in what was
a $2.7 billion legal marijuana market last year – has now reached a significant
milestone. But this milestone, set in the country’s most populous state,
applies to the much broader U.S. cannabis industry.
That industry is now forecast to hit $20.67 billion in 2020
(Research and Markets, September 18), on an estimated CAGR of 29.80 percent.
One of the big components that will do quite well in all of this is going to be
hemp, and it’s a subject that is largely under-reported on. Given that hemp was
illegal to grow without a permit for decades, and that the 2014 Farm Bill
finally made it possible for Americans to grow limited quantities of hemp, the
$620 million (Hemp Industries Association, 2014) U.S. market for hemp is currently
being serviced by some $500 million in imports.
With modern processing techniques, the powerful organic
fibers in the hemp plant can be extracted for various important industrial
uses, including a key LCM (lost circulation material) product for the global
drilling fluids market, which was recently forecast in a report published by
MarketReportsHub.com in January, as being on track to hit $16.31 billion by
2019. High-quality LCM is used in drilling mud to ubiquitously plug fractures
or handle porosity in geological formations, which lead to lost pressure and
output, and potentially blowouts. The high-grade organic fiber in hemp is
perfect for this application, but the limited domestic market has hindered its
more widespread use, even though it is superb at handling a variety of pressure
and temperature related phenomena without impairing the rheology (fluid
dynamics of substances like muds) of the drilling fluid, or increasing
fluid-loss.
Hemp can be made into a wide variety of consumer goods as
well, from fine clothing and shampoos, to high-grade medicinal cannabidiol and
nutraceuticals for the rapidly expanding global nutraceutical market, which is
set to grow at around 8 percent CAGR, from $186.2 billion this year to around
$270 billion in 2020 (Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India and
RNCOS, August). However, it is the lucrative niche market in LCM that North
Carolina based Hemp, Inc. has its eyes on the most, with the launch of the
company’s custom 70,000 square-foot multipurpose industrial hemp processing
plant, expected to be the biggest in all of North America, and capable of doing
everything from decortication (fiber stripping) to milling.
The company’s existing portfolio of hemp-infused consumer
products, like shampoos and conditioners, lip balms, moisturizers, skin
treatment oils, and candles, showcase an already well-developed branding sense.
Sure, Q2 sales this of nutraceuticals/bed and bath were up this year, but
revenues from the company’s forthcoming DrillWall™ product, used to maintain
seals across both energy and water drilling markets, are expected to be as much
as just under of $1 million a month.
Given such revenue projections from the company using a
limited workforce of one crew shift per day and an output of only one ton per
hour, a three-crew shift cycle means HEMP could be raking in $2.94 million a
month from its new facility, via juicy three to five year contracts typical
among LCM buyers. The company is also working on an absorbent hemp product used
to soak up spills called SpillSorbent™, made with hemp and another fibrous
plant known as kenaf. The company already has almost five million pounds of
material stored at its massive decortication facility and as of mid-August, the
150 acre kenaf crop of Tainung 2 cultivar, a kenaf variety prized for its
maximum mass yield, was about seven feet high and on schedule for harvesting
before the end of the year.
Learn more by visiting www.hempinc.com
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