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UK: Home-grown cannabis outstrips imports from Morocco

Alan Travis, home affairs editor

The Guardian

Monday 17 Mar 2003

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The majority of cannabis now consumed in England and Wales has not been
smuggled in but is actually grown here, according to a study to be
published next month.

The research for the Joseph Rowntree Foundation reveals that there has
been a sharp rise in recent years in domestic cultivation, particularly
in home-grown cannabis for personal use.

It appears a new breed of British gardener has emerged. But rather than
messing about in the back garden they spend their time in the cupboard
under the stairs tending their plants. In their case the answer doesn't
lie in the soil but in trays of water under lights as their crop is
produced hydroponically, without soil.

It has become such a popular pastime that for the first time
domestically cultivated cannabis has overtaken Moroccan hash or resin as
the major product in the British cannabis market. At least 3 million
people a year now use the drug.

The rise in home-grown British "grass" has led to a thriving legal
business in cannabis seed, which is available from UK-based seed
companies, and specialist growing equipment which is legally available
from gardening outlets, "hydroponic growshops", and over the internet.

The research by South Bank University's criminal policy research unit
and the national addiction centre at Kings College, London, is partly
based on interviews with 37 home cultivators, mainly men in their 20s
and 30s. Most had jobs or were students.

It says that the government's strategy of focusing on the more harmful
drugs, such as heroin and cocaine, means there is now a strong case for
the law to treat the small-scale cultivation of cannabis for personal
use or use by friends in the same way as simple possession, and only
attract a fine or warning. The study says this would not clash with
Britain's obligations under international drug treaties.

The research identified five types of cannabis growers in Britain, but
says many of them did it to ensure quality of product, to save money, or
as a way of avoiding contact with dealers. There is a wide variety of
growing technique.

There has been a trend to use premium seeds rather than imported
cannabis bush seeds, and to grow them under more lights, with an average
of 4.5 bulbs generating 1067 watts, compared with two bulbs pumping out
421w four years ago. The types identified were:

· Sole-use growers: cultivate cannabis as a money-saving hobby, for
personal use. Have 12 to 24 plants, using natural fertilisers and soil
mixtures more often than hydroponics.

· Medical growers: motivated by perceived therapeutic value. All those
interviewed were supplying multiple scelerosis sufferers and had been
charged by police.

· Social growers: grow to ensure good-quality supply for themselves and
their friends. They give it away or charge nominal price. Average two
dozen plants.

· Social/commercial growers: grow for profit but restrict sales to
social networks. Motivation is to supplement income. Have between two
and 100 plants.

· Commercial growers: sell to any customer. Grow their own crops to
guarantee high quality to secure supply and premium prices. All use
hydroponics. One said he earned £2,500 a month out of it.

The study says police forces differ in how they deal with cultivators.
Some are cautioned, some charged with trafficking under the 1971 Misuse
of Drugs Act which on third conviction carries a minimum seven year
sentence, and others are charged with the lesser offence of cultivation.

The report says there were 1,960 cannabis production offences in the UK
in 2000, with just under a quarter dealt with by police caution. The
rest went to court, with 240 ending in a prison sentence.

Mike Hough, of South Bank University, said the study showed that if the
government treated cultivation for personal use in a similar way to
possession, and introduced administrative fines for non-commercial
cultivation, it could be done within the limits of UN drug conventions.


 

 

 

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