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Will Thailand Soon Allow Citizens To Grow Cannabis At Home?

Thailand is ramping up cannabis legalization efforts that will soon allow all Thais to cultivate six cannabis
plants in their homes and sell their home-grown harvest to the government, to turn into medical
marijuana.

“We are in the process of changing laws to allow the medical use of marijuana freely,” said recently-
appointed Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul, in Bangkok on Wednesday. “We have high confidence
that marijuana will be among the major agricultural products for Thai households. We are speeding up
the law changes. But there is a process to it.”

Back in September, Anutin alluded, “In the near future, families will be able to plant cannabis trees in
their back gardens like any other herb.”

In addition to the historic push for “home grow” regulations, Thailand has built what the government
describes as the largest, industrial-scale medical marijuana facility in Southeast Asia.

On September 2, Maejo University researchers planted 12,000 new marijuana seedlings in northern
Thailand’s Chiang Mai, while government officials looked on. The seedlings were provided by the
government’s Department of Medical Service, according to the Asia Times.

Officials expect the plants will produce medical marijuana within six months.

The Government Pharmaceutical Organization (GPO) hopes to cultivate the plants to harvest enough
ingredients to manufacture one million bottles of cannabis oil, each containing five milliliters, by
February 2020.

Not a matter of politics?


“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,” Anutin
said.

While Anutin claims that cannabis is not a political issue, he caused a commotion in advance of
Thailand’s general election in March, by campaigning for the legalization of household cultivation. He
led his middle-sized Bhum Jai Thai (Proud to be Thai) party’s campaign earlier this year during
parliamentary elections by promising each household could cultivate six marijuana plants. Incidentally,
his Bhum Jai Thai party is now part of the ruling coalition.

He also assured his voters of their economic advancement, by proposing the sale of each mature
marijuana plant to the government for $2,225. Subsequently, a household could earn $13,350 for selling
their entire allotment of six plants. Quite an alluring prospect, considering the average Thai salary is
reportedly $8,200 per year, nationwide (or 24,000 baht per month).

It doesn’t grow like a weed.

Before Thai citizens get their hopes up over a potential green rush, cultivation experts caution that not
every plant that reaches maturation produces medical-grade cannabis. Additionally, the ones that do
are difficult to cultivate. Amateur cultivators could probably produce low-grade marijuana. However,
without taking time to tend to the plants properly or invest in necessities such as nutrients and proper
lighting equipment, the flower produced would potentially not qualify for medical use, purchasable by
the government.

The arguments for adult-use:

If adult-use cannabis is allowed, private growers could earn more natural profits from the protean plant
with less quality control.

Anutin predicts fully legalized marijuana would be a more significant and lucrative crop for Thailand than
rice, sugarcane, tapioca, rubber, or other produce in his nation’s mostly agrarian economy.
He has suggested Thailand’s low wages could quantify competitiveness in international markets,
compared to larger, foreign cannabis companies where manufacturing costs are significantly higher.
Although, as the entire world seemingly races to market to capitalize on, and benefit from, the plant’s
healing and profitable possibilities, up-and-coming competitors in Latin America, Africa and elsewhere in
Asia, could outgrow Thailand.

Anutin believes Thailand could gain a competitive advantage by creating niche strains for exportation.

Maejo University has reportedly developed a marijuana strain it calls “Issara” (independence), which
offers 1:1 percentages of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and cannabidiol (CBD), according to the Asia
Times.

Thailand became the first nation in Southeast Asia to legalize medical marijuana and kratom, in 2018.
Adult-use cannabis remains illegal in the kingdom, with punishments including imprisonment. However,
if Anutin keeps up the purportedly non-political momentum, that may soon be a thing of the past. Read
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