These guys deal with cannabis in Singapore – and don’t feel paranoid
- Trafficking drugs in the Lion City carries a death sentence – but that hasn’t stopped industrial grower and biotech firm CannAcubed from setting up there
- It is hoping to cash in on hemp’s value as an agricultural commodity, with a global industrial market projected to be worth US$10.6 billion by 2025
Since May, Singapore has hosted the global headquarters of CannAcubed, an industrial cannabis grower whose operations are mostly located in Yunnan, China. CannAcubed specialises in the cultivation of industrial cannabis, or hemp – strains of cannabis with less than 0.3 per cent of the psychoactive substance tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). In China, cannabis is illegal but government permits allow hemp growers to operate in Yunnan.
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“We export CBD into Europe and other northern markets,” said CannAcubed CEO Glenn Davies, referring to cannabidiol, a non-psychoactive relaxant. “Then there’s the domestic focus on China, with hemp textiles and garments. Third, we are developing our own seed bank.”
Eventually CannAcubed hopes to develop a strain of cannabis that contains no THC at all.
Hemp, which provides similar fibres to trees but grows more quickly, is increasingly seen as an up-and-coming agricultural commodity. The global industrial hemp market is projected to be worth US$10.6 billion by 2025, according to a report by Grand View Research. The plant draws upon a rich tradition in East Asia. In China, Korea and Japan, hemp fibres were used to make clothing, bowstrings and paper, among other products.
Davies has been an entrepreneur for 15 years and is accustomed to the dynamism of emerging markets. However, running a cannabis production firm out of Singapore, where he is a permanent resident, may be his most challenging venture yet.
“Singaporeans are very intrigued, very interested,” Davies said. “They get excited and want to know about it and understand the industry. From our perspective it’s always constant education … people want to learn what we do, how it works, where we buy, how CBD is extracted.”
The firm’s first crops were planted in July and the first harvest took place in November – a turnaround of just four months.
“We’re looking at focusing on [a few] areas for the potential of cannabis,” Davies said, before identifying the firm’s goals. “Waste reduction by introducing the world’s first true biodegradable plastic; solving some of the world’s energy crises by looking at hemp as an alternative biofuel; tackling deforestation by introducing cannabis as an alternative to paper and materials made from trees.”
Earlier this year, Singapore’s National Research Foundation announced it would conduct studies on synthetic cannabinoids and CannAcubed has already had discussions about a role in the research. Davies sees it as a sign that the city state will eventually tap the economic potential of cannabis. “Knowing now that Singapore has already been interested in the therapeutic benefits of CBD, I do think it’s just a matter of time.” ■