Many of Ecuador's flower farms convert to hemp production as international flower sales drop
Jul 30, 2021
Workers water hemp plants of hemp startup CannAndes, at a farm traditionally used for roses, in Tabacundo.
By Alexandra Valencia
At one of Ecuadors oldest flower farms, workers are planting hemp on land that traditionally used for roses, making a bet that selling cannabinoid products will help offset the decline in flower sales caused by the pandemic.
Declining sales spurred by the coronavirus outbreak dealt a heavy blow to Ecuadors flower sector, one of the Andean nations traditional export industries, leaving farms cutting output or seeking to reinvent themselves.
The Boutique Flowers farm in Tabacundo, an hour north of the capital Quito, has built cannabis greenhouses to take advantage of recent legal reforms that allow for cultivation of the plant even though marijuana remains illegal.
Marijuana contains higher levels of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) the cannabinoid that causes a high than hemp. Ecuadorean law requires that cannabis have less than 1% THC.
More:
https://cuencahighlife.com/many-of-ecuadors-flower-farms-convert-to-hemp-production-as-international-flower-sales-drop/