- Hemp
industry’s growth exhibiting boom trends in wake of the 2018 Farm Bill’s
passage, altering regulatory oversight of the plant
- Sugarmade
is focusing efforts on supporting the nascent hemp industry with
hydroponic growth supplies
- The
company has also signed a supply agreement with Kentucky-based private
hemp cultivator Hempistry to support Hempistry’s micropropagation work
- Micropropagation
helps growers ensure plant quality by cloning “mother” plants that exhibit
preferred genetic traits
Hydroponic agriculture supplier Sugarmade Inc. (OTCQB: SGMD) is preparing to
significantly expand its operations in the hemp cultivation industry following
recent regulatory changes in the agriculture sector and a new agreement with
Kentucky-based hemp cultivator Hempistry Inc. to deliver resources for its
plant micropropagation work.
Hemp cultivation is beginning to flourish, after decades of
federal prohibition in the United States ceased with President Donald Trump’s
signing of the 2018 Farm Bill late last year. Limited research cultivation gave
way to full-scale agricultural potential for raising hemp crops, creating
anticipation for hydroponics specialty product suppliers such as Sugarmade that
are functioning as supportive industries for the boom in grower interest.
Sugarmade’s supply contract with Hempistry for the latter’s
micropropagation operations is expected to be an ongoing relationship, as
Hempistry grows domestically and into the international arena.
Micropropagation is a process that involves cloning or
“propagating” new hemp plants from existing “mother” plants that have shown a
desirable genetic profile. Much of the hemp cultivated in North America is
grown through this propagation process rather than from seed, and the micropropagation
process not only ensures exact replicas of the best mother plants but also
allows for a very large number of plants to be readied simultaneously,
according to the company.
“With at least 42,000 acres of hemp expected to be planted
in Kentucky and considering an average plant density per acre of well over
1,000, farmers in Kentucky will need hundreds of millions of clones over the
coming years,” Sugarmade CEO Jimmy Chan, who is also a Hempistry director,
stated in a news release. “When these numbers are multiplied over the many
other hemp cultivation states, it is easy for anyone to see the strong demand
scenario that is quickly developing.”
Kentucky found itself in a position of eminence amid the
long-running debate over the Farm Bill’s passage, which was championed by
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, the senior congressman from the
Bluegrass State. McConnell pushed for the bill’s passage in large measure to
ensure that hemp could be legally grown as an agricultural product without Drug
Enforcement Administration prohibition (http://ibn.fm/OrSSG) in an effort to revive the state’s
flagging flagship industry. The bill’s success and successive agricultural
efforts in Kentucky have led the media to begin branding (http://ibn.fm/cEUm7) the state
as the ‘Silicon Valley of Hemp’.
Kentucky farming officials have begun to pin their hopes on
hemp as an up-and-coming successor to the state’s tobacco industry, which has a
long-controversial history because of tobacco’s impact on users’ health.
“We don’t know if industrial hemp will replace tobacco, but
we are going to champion it,” Kentucky Commissioner of Agriculture Ryan Quarles
told news outlet CNBC (http://ibn.fm/Kz9i4).
According to the commissioner, the number of the state’s
applications for hemp cultivation this year is expected to increase about five
times from 2018. Hemp growth is on track to top 50,000 acres this year, up from
16,000 acres for last year, according to the report. With the boom in hemp
cultivation occurring this planting season, many of the supplies required for
successful micropropagation operations are in very short supply, which makes
the Hempistry agreement particularly valuable to both companies.
Sugarmade acquired an option last year to invest up to $1
million in the Hempistry operation at a locked-in 2018 valuation.
Privately-held Hempistry expects to engage in both direct cultivation and co-op
cultivation activities with local farmers this year. Chan noted that Sugarmade
has already commenced processing of micropropagation supply orders.
CNBC’s report notes that Hemp Business Journal expects
the hemp industry to reach $1.9 billion in revenues by 2022, up 90 percent from
about $1 billion in 2018, while a bullish estimate by researcher Brightfield
Group forecasts that the hemp-derived CBD-infused product market could reach
$22 billion during the same time period.
For more information, visit the company’s website at www.Sugarmade.com
NOTE TO INVESTORS: The latest news and updates
relating to SGMD are available in the company’s newsroom athttp://ibn.fm/SUGAR
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