Replacing Tobacco with Hemp in the Beqaa Is Financially Rewarding for Farmers and Government in Lebanon
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. The Purpose of the Study
1.2. Reasons to Replace Tobacco with Hemp
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Methodology
- Identifying hemp for medical and industrial uses as an alternative to tobacco, establishing benchmarks, and defining the scope of the investigation.
- Determining the respective costs of tobacco and hemp, encompassing the estimation of total costs and financial savings.
- Highlighting the direct, quantifiable, and tangible benefits arising from both alternatives.
- Based on the analysis, we selected hemp as the more economically advantageous product.
2.2. Assumptions
2.3. Limitations
3. Understanding Cannabinoids
3.1. Why Hemp Is Important
3.1.1. Use of Hemp and CBD Oil
3.1.2. The Market
3.1.3. Trends and Market Dynamics
Old Trends
New Trends
3.2. The Major Driver: Legalization and Regulatory Changes
3.2.1. Challenges
The Concentration of Generated Wealth in Big Pharma
Cost of CBD Challenge
3.2.2. Opportunities
Policy Amendments to Address Past Failures
The Green Rush of Investors
3.3. Key Players in the International Market
Establishing Local and Regional Supply Chains
3.4. The Economic Crisis and the Flourishing Drug Production in Lebanon
3.5. The Legal Framework for Cannabis in Lebanon
Key Aspects of Law No. 178
- General Provisions:
- Defines the cannabis plant and its derivatives, including the psychoactive THC and non-narcotic CBD.
- Establishes the regulatory authority, its structure, and its roles, including the appointment of a committee to assess licensing compliance.
- The Regulatory Authority:
- Charged with implementing and enforcing the law, determining cultivation areas, and setting substance levels.
- Tasks include developing a national strategy for cannabis, advising sectors, granting licenses, and preventing monopolization.
- The authority is also responsible for creating an electronic database for monitoring and regulating the industry.
- Management Structure:
- Managed by a board of directors and a general manager.
- The board comprises seven members, representing various ministries and experts in related fields.
- Licensing:
- The authority has exclusive rights to issue licenses for cultivation and related operations.
- Types of licenses include importation, cultivation, manufacturing, research, and exportation, among others.
- Entities eligible for licenses include Lebanese pharmaceutical and industrial companies, foreign companies, cooperatives, individual farmers, and research institutions.
- Licenses are issued for three years and include specific conditions, with a renewal process in place.
- License Application and Renewal:
- Applications are evaluated for compliance with legal standards, and decisions are made within sixty working days.
- The authority must provide clear reasoning for any rejection, and applicants have the right to appeal.
- Oversight and Compliance:
- Regular inspections ensure adherence to license conditions and industry standards.
- The law emphasizes transparency and traceability from seed importation to product sale.
- Licensed entities must maintain detailed records accessible to the authority and preserved for ten years.
- Import and Export Operations:
- Entities must comply with the conditions for importation and exportation, including submitting detailed operational plans to the authority.
- Annual estimates and periodic data must be provided to both the authority and the International Narcotics Control Board.
- Record-Keeping and Penalties:
- A specialized register, overseen by the General Director, logs all transactions and losses, with strict prohibitions on record alterations.
- Criminal penalties for violations include imprisonment, fines, and license revocation.
- Financial and Tax Provisions:
- Companies are required to fund awareness campaigns and support rehabilitation initiatives.
- Personnel implementing the law are subject to existing tax laws.
- Justifying Reasons:
- The law aims to provide economic benefits, support sustainable development, and align with global trends in regulating cannabis cultivation.
4. Research Gap
5. Results
6. Discussion
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Hemp Based Product | Application |
---|---|
Hemp based foods | Hemp foods have significant health benefits and may help as a food supplement to combat hunger [10]. Hemp seeds have a high nutritional value, along with the oil extracted from them [18]. |
Hemp in Cosmetic and Therapeutic Industries | Over 100 bioactive compounds in hemp inflorescences have been identified, including THC and CBD [18]. Hemp seed oil products have regenerative, anti-aging, and anti-inflammatory properties and therefore have found application in the cosmetics industry [10]. |
Hemp as an Eco-Friendly Multipurpose Crop | Hemp is a cash crop with environmental benefits, adaptability to various agronomic conditions, and numerous beneficial uses such as carbon dioxide absorption, phytoremediator for soils, production of bioplastics, and eco-friendly paper production [10,18,19]. |
Hemp as an Energy Source | Hemp has found uses as a versatile energy resource, suitable for heat, electricity, and biofuel production, and may serve as a raw material for the production of numerous consumer goods [10]. |
Hemp Fibers as a Textile | Hemp constitutes one of the strongest plant-based fibers, which has amplified its application in the traditional textile and paper production [18]. |
Hemp as a replacement to the Traditional Construction Material | Hemp is increasingly recognized as a widely utilized plant in the production of bio-based building materials. However, they have a limitation due to their relatively low mechanical strength, which could restrict the scalability of these products as structural components in construction [18,20]. |
Description | Value |
---|---|
Total units sold in kg in the Beqaa area | 374,053/year |
Average price of one kg of tobacco | USD 4.14/kg |
Total Purchase Value by Regie | $1,458,248.00 |
Average production of Kg tobacco | 220 kg/dunam |
Revenue for farmers | 828 $/dunam 220 kg/permit × USD 4.14/kg |
The Total Revenue of the farmer per Permit: 300 Kg | =USD 1129/permit |
Land preparation cost | 55 $/dunam |
Seedlings cost | 40 $/dunam |
Planting cost | 70 $/dunam |
Post-Planting cost | 115 $/dunam |
Harvesting cost | 70 $/dunam |
Post-Harvesting cost | 25 $/dunam |
Breakeven or fixed total costs for farmers | 375 $/dunam |
Farmers’ Profit | 828 − 375 = 453 $/dunam |
Gross Contribution Margins = | 55% |
Total Cost (Tobacco) in USD | Average Cost in USD/kg (Tobacco) | Average Cost in USD/kg (Hemp) | |
---|---|---|---|
Average Purchasing Price | 1,458,248 | 3.78 | 3.78 |
Labor Costs | 7481 | 0.02 | 0.02 |
Transportation Costs | 7500 | 0.02 | 0.02 |
Procurement Costs | 8000 | 0.02 | 0.02 |
Cost of rejects | 0.2 × 1,458,248 = 291,650 | 0.8 | 0.8 |
Other Costs (including seeds) | 3740 | 0.01 | 1.91 |
Total Cost | 1,776,619 | 4.64 | 6.54 |
Selling price | 374,053 − 374,053 × 0.2 = 299,242.4 kg 299,242.4 kg × 3.20 USD /kg = USD 957,576 | 3.2 | 18 |
Net Drain/Profit | 819,043 | −1.44 | +11.46 |
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© 2024 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Abboud, M.; Gemayel, J.; Khnayzer, R.S. Replacing Tobacco with Hemp in the Beqaa Is Financially Rewarding for Farmers and Government in Lebanon. Agriculture 2024, 14, 1349. https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture14081349
Abboud M, Gemayel J, Khnayzer RS. Replacing Tobacco with Hemp in the Beqaa Is Financially Rewarding for Farmers and Government in Lebanon. Agriculture. 2024; 14(8):1349. https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture14081349
Chicago/Turabian StyleAbboud, Mazen, Joseph Gemayel, and Rony S. Khnayzer. 2024. "Replacing Tobacco with Hemp in the Beqaa Is Financially Rewarding for Farmers and Government in Lebanon" Agriculture 14, no. 8: 1349. https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture14081349
APA StyleAbboud, M., Gemayel, J., & Khnayzer, R. S. (2024). Replacing Tobacco with Hemp in the Beqaa Is Financially Rewarding for Farmers and Government in Lebanon. Agriculture, 14(8), 1349. https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture14081349