CANNABIS & SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT - Faaat Cannabis SDG Report 2019
CANNABIS & SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT - Faaat Cannabis SDG Report 2019
CANNABIS & SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT - Faaat Cannabis SDG Report 2019
Contributors: Olivier Bertrand M.D, Michal Brožka, Amy Case King, Swami Chaitanya,
Genine Coleman, Chris Conrad, Julie P. Fry, Hanka Gabrielová,
Kristen Garringer, Farid Ghehiouèche, Chris Halmo, Daniela Kreher,
Marcin Krzyżkowiak, Hannes Lenhart and Kirstin Nevedal.
Some rights reserved. This work is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-
ShareAlike 3.0 IGO licence (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 IGO; creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/igo). Under the
terms of this licence, you may copy, redistribute and adapt the work for non-commercial purposes, provided
the work is appropriately cited, as indicated below.
The views expressed in this report are those of the authors, not necessarily those of other contributors,
supporters of FAAAT. FAAAT think & do tank is a registered non-profit in Paris Prefecture (France), referenced
by Official Gazette (148e année, Nº12, 19 mars 2016, Nº1540, page 93) with SIREN number 822213013. For
more information please contact [email protected].
The printing of this 3rd edition is generously powered by Aurora Cannabis Inc.; CBDepot, s.r.o.; Ceres Limited;
Deep Nature Project GmbH; Elixinol Europe; the European Industrial Hemp
Association; Fields of Green for All; Hemp Industries Association; Hempoint;
Hempro Int. GmbH & Co. KG; Hikurangi Cannabis Company; the Knowmad
Institut; the Mendocino Appellations Project and Vote Hemp.
Forewords..........................................................................................................................................................................................1
Preamble. ........................................................................................................................................................................................3
Introduction......................................................................................................................................................................................5
Definitions.........................................................................................................................................................................................6
References...................................................................................................................................................................................103
Paving the way for the next decade in Cannabis and hemp policies. 1
Forewords.
« The Sustainable Development Goals offer an invaluable platform to help reshape the public policy agenda. By
placing people at the center of our efforts, those of us who occupy decision-making positions must critically
analyze the paths taken so far, and be ready to modify actions that have not achieved the expected results.
Policies that relate to drugs, in particular, have much to learn from the 2030 agenda. If something is to be
considered problematic in this domain, it is not fundamentally in relation with the very substances, but rather in
relation with shortcomings and limitations in terms of sustainable human development that our societies suffer.
The tragedies caused by the lack of adequate and effective control of drug markets have increased social
suffering, especially in relatively less developed countries and regions.
That is the reason why sustainable development opportunities must be taken as a guidance to improve the
performance of drug policies. But this will not be possible without a strong public administration and efficient
evidence-based public policies that, without repeating schemes worn out by the absence of results, take on the
challenge of incorporating a new focus.
For all these reasons, we commend the efforts that Civil Society is undertaking to achieve an effective political
incidence of this agenda, and we gladly join in an open dialogue where diverse voices and visions can fit. »
Preamble.
Cannabis placement in international law was done in the absence of scientific evaluation and has provided the
basis for a morality drivin war on drugs for many decades. Among governments and non-state actors there
are relatively few who still deny the failure of drug prohibition, and even less that advocate for its continuation.
The World Health Organization backed and justified the severe status of control applied to the plant during
the design of modern international drug policy1 – yet recently invited the world to rethink the approach to
Cannabis by assessing it for the first time on the basis of evidence, and by recommending that international
control over the plant, its components, and its medical preparations be lowered2.
Cannabis policy reform helps create a model and forge the tools necessary to address the outdated or
missing evidence as well as scheduling issues for a wide array of plants, products, or substances liable to
generate harms or dependence in humans.
Because of its characteristics, widespread cultivation and use, and the diversity of its applications, the
Cannabis sativa L. plant and related policies directly pertain to at least 64 of the 169 targets among 15 out of
the 17 Goals of the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development3 (the Sustainable Development
Goals, or SDGs) adopted by a consensus of all Member States of the UN in 2015. This sustainable address
of Cannabis and Cannabis policy echoes 75 of the 104 operational recommendations of another document
adopted by global consensus one year later, the outcome document of the 30th special session of the UN
General Assembly4 on the world drug situation (UNGASS 2016) which noted that “efforts to achieve the
Sustainable Development Goals and to effectively address the world drug problem are complementary and
mutually reinforcing”.
Surprisingly, this plant affects the SDGs both positively and negatively. And policies play a major role in the
impact of Cannabis on our societies.
The non psychoactivity-related uses of the Cannabis sativa L. plant – called “hemp”, “industrial hemp” or
“industrial cannabis” in this context – have accompanied humankind over centuries, in particular for the
provision of food from the seed (Goals 1 & 2) and through the numerous products derived from its fiber,
among which, efficient building materials can be locally sourced and produced. (Goals 9 & 11). More recently,
the plant has continued to be explored for the soil-cleaning property of its roots, contributing to clean water
and oceans (Goal 13). The significant biomass produced by the stems of cannabis has revealed itself to be
both a promising source of energy (Goal 7) and a renewable source of recyclable vegetal plastic (Goal 15), etc.
Yet, not only the non psychoactivity-related uses of Cannabis sativa L. can contribute to the efforts to meet
these Goals (1, 2, 7, 9, 11, 12, 13 and 15); in addition, reforming the current repressive, prohibitive, and
marginalizing policies concerning the psychoactivity-related uses of Cannabis sativa L. is indispensable to
meet Goals 3, 4, 5, 8, 10, 13, 16 and 17.
The psychoactivity-related uses of Cannabis sativa L. witnessed throughout History – are very diverse and
include what is known as “therapeutic” or “medical use”, “recreational” or “adult use” as well as “religious” or
“spiritual use”.
Overly restrictive public policies addressing the psychoactivity-related uses of the plant have hindered its
availability for medical purposes and prevented implementation of sensible regulation for non-medical use
applications. In many countries, and under the influence of international institutions, these policies eventually
took the form of a “War on Drugs” that targeted the cultivation/distribution of the Cannabis sativa L. plant
(among others), its psychoactivity-related uses, and all related activities, with an objective of eradication.
These policies became warped into a destructive spiral – contemporarily proving to be a major historical
failure in several capacities (e.g., policy, environment, economic and human cost, etc.)5.
This attempt to create a “drug-free world”6 through prohibition and proactive law enforcement, created
a pretext for State violence while generating or reinforcing criminal groups, in particular in regions with
historical presence of the Cannabis sativa L. plant. Non-democratic, repressive, and authoritarian approaches
to supply and demand reduction policies have systematized government corruption (Goal 16), increased
arrests and imprisonment rates (Goals 1, 11 and 1)), and augmented factors of social and health risks for
people who use cannabis (Goals 1, 3 and 10) by hindering access to appropriate prevention and education
for safe consumption (Goals 4 & 12), ultimately generating innumerable human rights violations (Goal 16) in
particular among women (Goal 5), minorities (Goal 10), and the poorest (Goal 1).
All the individual and collective conditions targeted by these latter Goals are deeply affected, making it
impossible, in practice, to reach the Agenda by 2030 without adopting now radically different regulations of all
aspects and activities linked to the psychoactivity-related uses of the Cannabis plant.
When the XXIst Century was just around the corner citizens and social movements struggled to balance the
pillars of the United Nations – peace, security and development – with ethics, sustainability and planet-
sensibility. Many anticipated the degradation of social, geopolitical, diplomatic or environmental contexts that
we are nowadays witnessing. But few were those who could have believed that the United Nations would hear
their call, make these concepts hers, and proactively promote sustainability. Similarly, decades of vigorous
and narrow-minded approach to Cannabis by multilateral organizations have made many lose faith in the
ability of the United Nations to reconnect with realities of the ground and efficiently assess and address both
the good as well as the bad sides of Cannabis and Cannabis policies. The authors of this document tend to
think that the period from 2015-2020 is pivotal (with the SDGs, the UNGASS and the WHO reviews) that will
call for intense involvement and cooperation at all levels to transform our world for 2030, and instigate peace,
security and development in harmony with the ethnosphere with the help of sound ethical and sustainable
Cannabis policy reforms.
Introduction.
The reformist trends in Cannabis policy globally is an ongoing movement unlikely to be stopped. A deficit of
democratic monitoring of the generalization of legal Cannabis markets could represent a threat for affected
populations and public health. Ethics are needed. A renewed interest and takeover of the topic Cannabis by all
categories of the population are urgent.
A one-size-fits-all policy seems neither desirable nor possible, both for geographical imperatives and for
the diversity of uses and products of the plant. This makes consensual policy models (exportable and
generalizable) difficult to emerge.
Rather than trying to solve the equation of the perfect Cannabis policy and its infinite variables, a more
feasible approach would be to step aside, list all the different public policies that affect, or are involved with
Cannabis, and address them individually. The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and its 17 Goals is
but a perfect tool for this purpose.
This discussion paper highlights important research and experiential outcomes from scholars, civil society
organizations, affected populations, and market stakeholders. It seeks to show the potential of the Cannabis
plant in appropriately regulated settings as transformative for our societies – so long as ethical practices and
sustainable approaches are kept central.
This document is not intended to be an exhaustive guide. It is designed as a valuable resource to contribute to
post-prohibition studies, and help understand, from diverse public policy perspectives, the links between the
policies of Cannabis and the Sustainable Development Goals, and the impact of the former on the latter.
6 Cannabis & Sustainable Development.
Definitions.
Addressing such a complex issue requires the recollection of basic concepts and definitions.
Cannabis sativa L. is the botanical name of a plant belonging to the family Cannabaceae. Modern research
has shown that the genus Cannabis is mono-specific (i.e, within the genus “Cannabis”, the only existing
species is “sativa”). According to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), while Cannabis is
commonly designated by different subspecies names (e.g., “indica”, “ruderalis”, “spontanea”, “kafiristanica”),
“the chemical and morphological distinctions by which cannabis has been divided into these subspecies are
often not readily discernible, appear to be environmentally modifiable, and vary in a continuous fashion. For
most purposes, it suffices to apply the name Cannabis sativa to all cannabis plants encountered.”7
Hemp is the English vernacular name historically given to Cannabis sativa L.8. Nowadays, its meaning has
evolved, to mean crops explicitly grown for purposes other than the psychoactive ones, such as clothing fiber,
paper, fuel, building material from the fiber, or food and oil from the seeds. The dissociation of “hemp” from
psychoactivity-related Cannabis is purely artificial and terminological. Nevertheless, States have adopted
various cutting points to distinguish legal and illegal Cannabis according to THC content (e.g., 0.2%, 0.3%,
0.6%, 1%).
The dried parthenocarpic fruits (i.e., fruits not wearing seed) of the female Cannabis sativa plant are known by
dozens of different names (with significant geographical variations) for being the part of the plant that contain
the highest concentration of phytocannabinoids, molecules that have innumerable pharmacological effects
on animals (including human beings). Phytocannabinoids are only one among diverse classes of organic
compounds with pharmacological effects of the plant. They are much more specific to Cannabis sativa L. than
to any other plant.
It was only in the late 1990s that research started to reveal the mechanisms of action of these
phytocannabinoids, responsible for the unique and characteristic psychoactive effects of the Cannabis sativa
L. plant. Cannabinoids – not only phytocannabinoids (from ancient Green φυτόν (phutón), “plant”; phyto-
cannabinoids are cannabinoids present in plants) but also endocannabinoids (from ancient Greek ἔνδον
(éndon), “inner”, “internal”; endo-cannanbinoids are endogenous, internal to human body) activate specific
neuronal receptors in the human body9; and these receptors form the endocannabinoid system, involved in
maintaining the body’s homeostasis10. Chemist have nowadays created artificial molecules that enter in the
same chemical family and activate the human endocannabinoid system: they are called neocannabinoids
(from νέος (néos), “new”, “young”) and can only obtained by chemical synthesis.
7 UNODC, 2009.
8 Hazekamp et al., 2016
9 Hanuš et al., 2016
10 Komorowski et al., 2007
Paving the way for the next decade in Cannabis and hemp policies. 7
Δ9-THC (delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol) is the cannabinoid identified as being primarily responsible for the
unique pharmacological effects of Cannabis, including the so-called “high”, but also an important part of
the medical effects associated with the plant. While being the primary psychoactive constituent present in
Cannabis sativa plants, its effects are modulated by complex pharmacological interactions with more than
150 other cannabinoids thus far identified. Other well-known cannabinoid, CBD, however, does not provoke the
“recreational” effect of ∆9-THC.
Sustainable Development Goal 1.
Ending poverty in all its forms everywhere.
NO POVERTY
End poverty in all its forms everywhere.
Paving the way for the next decade in Cannabis and hemp policies. 9
The Cannabis market is to a large extent Imprisonment often means the removal of a family
dominated by local cultivation and consumption. or community member expected to contribute to the
Yet, Cannabis crops grown mostly by small food economic stability of the group. Alternatives to prison
producers and family farmers are largely curtailed should be systematized in the case of petty Cannabis
and exploited by Drug Trafficking Organizations. and drug policy offences.
There are traditional local implantation of these Criminal records (which stigmatize and undermine
crops in many regions, and all major illicit Cannabis- the offenders’ ability to reintegrate appropriately into
producing areas are in developing countries. Policies society, and collaterally affects labour, family, and
should ensure legal international trade benefits the education) should be erased.
populations that have been growing Cannabis for
generations. Crop eradication policies should be urgently
discontinued, as they destruct farmers’ sole means of
Legally regulating psychoactivity-related survival and push them further into poverty. Related
Cannabis are a direct way to economically empower practices such as land seizure, crop fumigations
populations living in situations of poverty. Policy and other indiscriminate mass-eradication methods
reform should target vulnerable populations already must be stopped. New policies should repair asset
involved in illicit Cannabis-related activities and forfeiture, seizure of Cannabis farmers’ land, and set
prioritize their inclusion in regulated markets. up procedures of property claim and restitution.
Reasonable redistribution of the profits: The Policy reforms should consider legal Cannabis
high number of middlemen between growers production as an outcome of Alternative
and consumers is a characteristic element of Development programs and strategies: Instead
illicit Cannabis markets – policy reforms should of replacing Cannabis plants with other crops, AD
reduce their number, or reduce middlemen’s profits policies could focus on training and assisting farmers
compared to those of growers and retailers. in their transition from illegal to legal Cannabis
production settings.
Diversification in the type of Cannabis products
manufactured (health-related products, food, energy, It is crucial to proactively preserve the traditions
bioplastics, textile, etc.) should be seeked to reduce associated with the long-established cultivation of
farmers’ vulnerability to market price variations, and Cannabis while granting fair access to international
contribute to local or self-sufficiency,. regulated markets.
Target 1.1
By 2030, eradicate extreme poverty for all people everywhere, currently
measured as people living on less than $1.25 a day.
Target 1.2
By 2030, reduce at least by half the proportion of men, women and children of
all ages living in poverty in all its dimensions according to national definitions.
Target 1.5
By 2030, build the resilience of the poor and those in vulnerable situations
and reduce their exposure and vulnerability to climate-related extreme events
and other economic, social and environmental shocks and disasters.
3- supply 5- trends
(b) (v)
6- cooperation 7- development
(d) (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) (f) (g) (h) (i) (j) (k) (l)
Paving the way for the next decade in Cannabis and hemp policies. 11
A multifactorial approach is needed to tackle poverty, and systemic changes are inevitably required. In that
regard, national laws legally regulating psychoactivity-related Cannabis are a direct but unexplored way to
economically empower populations living in situations of poverty, and give everyone a chance to live in dignity.
The UNODC acknowledges that “the cannabis market [...] is to a large extent dominated by local cultivation
and consumption”11. This includes, of course, a remarkable number of persons cultivating the plant for their
consumption. However, the vast majority of Cannabis growers worldwide do cultivate it as an economical and
income-generating activity.
Populations in impoverished rural areas of peripheral countries are often the most vulnerable. Among them,
many have been involved in the (illicit) production of Cannabis, because of traditional local implantation of
these crops, for lack of employment or a possible alternative legal activity, or by coercion in areas of conflict.
There, Cannabis crops grown mostly by small food producers and family farmers are largely curtailed and
exploited by Drug Trafficking Organizations (DTOs).
Similarly, in urban areas, including in developed countries, people involved in illegal retail markets often
belong to minorities, vulnerable groups, and/or the youth.
Tilting the balance of illicit profits in favour of the poorest in the supply chain.
A public policy reform targeting vulnerable populations already involved in illicit Cannabis-related activities,
to prioritize their inclusion in a regulated market, is one way to explore directly impacting and increasing the
quality of life for those populations, while providing them with fair economic and employment opportunities,
contributing to push the global poverty curve to a tipping point.
In complement, socially just regulations focusing on reducing the high number of middlemen between
growers and consumers (a characteristic element of illicit Cannabis markets) – or on reducing middlemen’s
profits compared to those of producers – would significantly increase resources for peasants, small-scale and
family farmers, as well as for populations involved in the illicit retail markets.
Such a reasonable redistribution of the profits generated, to the bottom of the pyramidal structure of
Cannabis markets hierarchy would significantly reduce poverty. It would also help end situations of labour
exploitation of adults, children and young people, thus aligning with Goal 8.
A collateral output could be an increased capacity of farmers to invest in the diversification, mechanization
of their farms, leading to increases in product quality, sustainability, and production patterns. Importantly,
diversification in the type of Cannabis products manufactured (health-related products, food, energy,
bioplastics, textile, etc.) can reduce farmers’ vulnerability to market price variations.
These benefits, however, imply a democratic and transparent monitoring of crops and the technical training of
the populations involved. Only embedding Cannabis crop regulation programs within regional, national, and
local agricultural strategies can lead to these benefits.
The lack of alternatives to imprisonment, in particular of young people, often means the removal of a family
or community member expected to contribute to the economic stability of the group.
Even without going to jail, the consequences of a single arrest for Cannabis-related offenses may prevent
affected persons from acquiring skills that could have contributed to improving their standard of living. In
particular, having a criminal record – a standard output of police controls – can stigmatize and undermine
the offenders’ ability to reintegrate appropriately into society. It also collaterally affects labour, family, and
education. According to the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), “discrimination, a lack of
investment in health and social welfare, and laws criminalizing the use or possession of small amounts of
drugs for personal use impede access to basic services such as housing, education or health care including
treatment”19 – fuelling poverty.
Ending such a vicious circle induced by prohibitionist policies could contribute to reducing an important
number of factors contributing to poverty.
Target 1.4
By 2030, ensure that all men and women, in particular the poor and the
vulnerable, have equal rights to economic resources, as well as access to
basic services, ownership and control over land and other forms of property,
inheritance, natural resources, appropriate new technology and financial
services, including microfinance.
Target 5.a
Undertake reforms to give women equal rights to economic resources, as well
as access to ownership and control over land and other forms of property,
financial services, inheritance and natural resources, in accordance with
national laws.
3- supply 4- rights
(b) (d) (g)
6- cooperation 7- development
(d) (a) (b) (d) (j) (h)
Similarly to other controlled plants (e.g., poppy, coca), Cannabis is often produced in “isolated areas of the
world, where the state’s presence tends to be limited to law enforcement interventions to destroy illegal
crops and arrest farmers engaged in their cultivation. Many of these areas are also plagued by high levels of
inequality and unequal access to land tenure. The destruction of farmers’ sole means of survival does little
more than push them further into poverty.”20 Women often have an important role in these communities – and
suffer a disproportionate impact of law enforcement.
During the last decades, the lack of favourable public policies – limited only to repressive law enforcement,
sustained counter-narcotic approaches, and crop-eradication – have caused the rights to the enjoyment of
ownership and economic resources to be stripped away from vulnerable populations involved in Cannabis
cultivation or production.
Among others, some major elements hampering the fulfillment of target 1.4 are:
• Seizures of farmers’ properties as a result of “supply reduction” operations and policies, which
annihilate ownership and control over land. Family farmers’ property titles, which have sometimes
taken generations to secure are forfeit in one day;
• In some countries, discriminatory laws prevent those who have criminal records related to Cannabis
policy infringement from purchasing properties;
• Ground and aerial crop fumigations and other indiscriminate mass-eradication methods severely
diminish natural resources and disrupt ecosystems. Future capacity of soils to produce viable
crops, of any kind, is undermined (see more in 2.4), thus depriving populations of a central source of
income: agriculture;
• Control of Cannabis market by DTOs deepens the infrastructure and technology breaches in areas
under these organizations’ control.
Meeting targets 1.4 and 5.A means reforming policies that include asset forfeiture, seizure of Cannabis
farmers’ land, and to set up procedures of property claim and land restitution.
Target 1.a
Ensure significant mobilization of resources from a variety of sources,
including through enhanced development cooperation, in order to provide
adequate and predictable means for developing countries, in particular least
developed countries, to implement programmes and policies to end poverty in
all its dimensions.
Target 1.b
Create sound policy frameworks at the national, regional and international
levels, based on pro-poor and gender-sensitive development strategies, to
support accelerated investment in poverty eradication actions.
3- supply 4- rights
(b) (d) (i)
6- cooperation 7- development
(a) (d) (e) (b) (h) (i) (j) (k) (l)
Mobilizing resources.
According to the list established by the US administration21, all major illicit Cannabis-producing countries are
developing countries. Historians have pointed out that this state of fact might be related to the concomitance
of decolonisation with the definition of the international drug control system22.
As such, there is particular potential for a legally regulated Cannabis industry to contribute to economic
growth worldwide. In developing countries, such a market can significantly change the game, helping people
find employment or starting businesses and incentivized trade across borders that will increase the economic
mobility of global citizens.
Recent developments in the Global South (such as Lesotho23, Thailand24, Colombia25, three countries
with a tradition of psychoactivity-related Cannabis cultivation) show that countries are ready to allow the
development of a locally regulated cultivation of Cannabis for medical purposes. Too often these reforms
only cover the production for purposes of export to reformed jurisdictions or countries where medical use
of Cannabis and Cannabis-based medicines is allowed, while reforms should focus on local and regional
demands.
Special care should be taken when undertaking such reforms: Only granting licenses to foreign-owned
corporations risks undermining local development by hampering the integration into legal markets of the
growers that were already producing Cannabis for the illicit market.
Furthermore, the granting of licenses for the production of psychoactivity-related Cannabis for medical
purposes should always go accompanied with the set up of the whole system provided for in the International
Drug Control Conventions: a national agency, and licenses for the manufacture, dispensation, prescription
(when relevant), and use within the borders of the country.
A careful approach to legal regulations should be adopted, taking stock of the newly recognized Rights of
Peasants and people working in rural areas26, and using existing instruments of international cooperation,
such as Alternative Development.
Unfortunately, the concept and practices implied by AD have shown their limited efficiency, often lacking
clear strategies built and agreed with the farmers, minimal program funding, and ultimately met little
acceptance because of the close association of AD programs and military eradication procedures28. These
barriers are starting to be overcome in some countries where humane and horizontal approaches to AD
programs have managed to reduce the cultivation of opium poppy. A major element that seems to make
Alternative Development programs structurally non-viable on a large scale: sustained demand continuously
drives the development of production, and the so-called “balloon effect”29, the observation that pushing down
cultivation in one region causes it to bulge somewhere else30.
In light of the recent developments in international trade in Cannabis plant derivatives, contemporary policies
could consider legal Cannabis production as an outcome of AD programs and strategies: Instead of replacing
Cannabis plants with other crops, Alternative Development could focus on training and assisting farmers
in their transition to legal settings. It is both feasible and desirable to help a sustainable transition of
populations involved in illicit trafficking by helping farmers to adapt soils, buy new seeds, or learn improved
and sustainable practices.
Comparatively, such a review of AD programs would provoke less opposition by populations, highlight and
add value to their traditional knowledge and empower them. Fewer resources would be needed, allowing
reallocation of part of the resources to interrelated needs (e.g., infrastructures, education, and the presence of
public services).
This approach could prevent farmers historically involved in Cannabis cultivation from being excluded
from legally regulated international markets. In that direction, Turkey undertook opium policy reforms that
could inspire: Its licensing system has maintained the 70000 to 100000 small-scale opium poppy farmers
(cultivating an average 0.4 hectares per person)31 whose production (of morphine, among others) is legally
sold and used in healthcare settings worldwide, instead of fuelling illicit trade in opioids.
Public policies should consider tools, such as protected geographic indicators to preserve, enhance, and
valorize traditional knowledge and products, and to ensure fair and non-relocatable economic opportunities
for the populations concerned.
Centuries of history showed it, and contemporary Genetic resources and associated traditional
research demonstrated it: Cannabis seeds are a knowledge on the Cannabis plant are invaluable
functional valuable and healthy food resource. assets determining the global food security,
Besides traditional ways of eating Cannabis seeds especially in the context of threats to biodiversity,
products, high nutritional value should lead to seed- climate change and the expanding global population.
derived products being considered as important The rich international protections for traditional
agents in the fight against malnutrition. medicine, knowledge and cultural expressions
must urgently apply to legacy Cannabis growers
Non-psychoactivity related Cannabis crops are a communities.
perfect candidate to contribute to increased value-
added and productivity in agricultural production. For Community-led initiatives to support and preserve
instance, substituting cotton with non psychoactivity- genetic diversity, as well as knowledge and know-
related Cannabis crops can increase productivity how regarding the Cannabis plant should be publicly
while drastically reducing water consumption for supported.
irrigation.
Stakeholder-driven approach to preserve genetic
Local “hemp seed” production for seeds can help resources and enhance communities’ accession
securing continued, cheap, equilibrated and essential to legally regulated markets (such as Appellations
food supply in impoverished areas. of Origin) should be supported and promoted, in
particular in peripheral and developing countries.
The high biomass production of Cannabis has
multiple advantages for to increasing efficiency and Laws restricting non psychoactivity-related
income, while reducing costs for farmers (carbon Cannabis cultivation to a list of selected registered
sequestration, weed control, but also recycling of “varieties” cause concern over the preservation of,
waste and overproduction). Excess of plant biomass and communities’ rights over, genetic resources,
can be turned into biochar to fertilize soils, bioplastic practices, and knowledge associated with traditional
materials or biofuel. (unregistered) cultivars/chemovars. It is also a
barrier to innovation, research, and development
Increases focus should be placed on studying of genetics of interest. Hemp crops should be
the promising mechanisms of the Cannabis plant for differentiated from psychoactivity-related crops using
phytoremediation and cleaning of soils contaminated the ratio methodology proposed by UNODC.
with hazardous elements.
Target 2.1
By 2030, end hunger and ensure access by all people, in particular the poor
and people in vulnerable situations, including infants, to safe, nutritious and
sufficient food all year round.
Target 2.2
By 2030, end all forms of malnutrition, including achieving, by 2025, the
internationally agreed targets on stunting and wasting in children under 5
years of age, and address the nutritional needs of adolescent girls, pregnant
and lactating women and older persons.
3- supply 6- cooperation
(b) (d)
The seeds of Cannabis sativa L. have been used as nutrition for thousands of years32 on all continents33.
Although the Cannabis seed has lost its place in our meals over the course of the XXth Century due to the
overall reduction of Cannabis cultivation for all purposes on the coattails of prohibitionist policies, a come-
back of “hemp seed” in various forms of food products and supplements has taken place. Research has
identified so-called “hemp seed oil” as a functional food, while animal studies demonstrate the long-standing
utility of the Cannabis seed as a valuable and healthy34 food resource.
Cannabis seeds are generally composed of about 30% oil and 25% protein, with considerable amounts
of dietary fiber, vitamins, and minerals. The “hemp seed oil” obtained by mechanical extraction, contains
over 80% polyunsaturated fatty acids, being exceptionally rich linoleic acid (omega-6) and alpha-linolenic
acid (omega-3) with an omega-6 to omega-3 ratio considered optimal for human health35. The biological
metabolites of the two essential fatty acids, gamma-linolenic acid and stearidonic acid are also present36.
Besides the traditional ways of consumption (seeds used raw or roasted, pressed as oils or ground as flour;
flowers used raw or in milk, teas, etc.), the high nutritional value of Cannabis seeds allow for fast mass scale
distribution of “hemp seed”-derived products to fight malnutrition37.
While value-added and productivity in general agriculture are relatively low compared to other sectors,
incorporating “hemp” could increase productivity in that segment. For instance, the Cannabis plant produces
twice as much fiber per acre as cotton and does not require irrigation. Substituting cotton with non
psychoactivity-related Cannabis crops would help increase productivity while drastically reducing water
consumption for irrigation. The cultivation of Cannabis for non psychoactivity-related purposes is already
economically advantageous in a short-term perspective, allowing for non psychoactivity-related Cannabis
crops to be a tool for programs of agricultural transition.
In peripheral and developing countries, a monitored transition to legal settings (as set out under Goal 1) would
allow illegal Cannabis growers to diversify their production and to locally supply Cannabis seeds-based
products, thus securing an essential food supply in impoverished areas.
Target 2.3
By 2030, double the agricultural productivity and incomes of small-scale
food producers, in particular women, indigenous peoples, family farmers,
pastoralists and fishers, including through secure and equal access to land,
other productive resources and inputs, knowledge, financial services, markets
and opportunities for value addition and non-farm employment.
Target 2.4
By 2030, ensure sustainable food production systems and implement resilient
agricultural practices that increase productivity and production, that help
maintain ecosystems, that strengthen capacity for adaptation to climate
change, extreme weather, drought, flooding and other disasters and that
progressively improve land and soil quality.
3- supply 4- rights
3 (b) (d) (i)
6- cooperation 7- development
(d) (b) (h) (i) (j) (k) (l)
22 Cannabis & Sustainable Development.
The high biomass production of the Cannabis plant sequesters carbon, helps control weeds, and added
back into the soil can help build and improve the soil. Waste and overproduction can be turned into bedding
and fodder for farm animals, helping to increase efficiency and income, while reducing costs for the farmer.
Excess of plant biomass can be turned into biochar using a kiln and added back into the soil improving
nutrient and water retention while giving more surface area for microbial growth38.
Protecting the ecosystem with the Cannabis plant & policy reforms.
Chemical eradication programs launched in the name of reducing the supply of Cannabis plants have left
farmable land arid and poisonous. Putting an end to such practices is the first step to recovery of agricultural
productivity of all types of crops. Increased research also tends to show the benefits of the Cannabis plant for
phytoremediation (i.e., cleaning up of soils, air, or water contaminated with hazardous contaminants)39.
Target 2.5
By 2020, maintain the genetic diversity of seeds, cultivated plants and
farmed and domesticated animals and their related wild species, including
through soundly managed and diversified seed and plant banks at the
national, regional and international levels, and promote access to and fair and
equitable sharing of benefits arising from the utilization of genetic resources
and associated traditional knowledge, as internationally agreed.
Target 15.6
Promote fair and equitable sharing of the benefits arising from the utilization
of genetic resources and promote appropriate access to such resources, as
internationally agreed.
4- rights 6- cooperation
(i) (d)
Encouraging the global discontinuation of the cultivation of a plant with such ethnobotanical importance
is by far the least possible sustainable decision to take. Yet it has been an underlying goal of international
drug control, in particular since the late 1980s, when the word “eradication” appeared in international fora,
resolutions, and Treaties40. Although the international drug system theoretically exempts all Cannabis plants
grown for non psychoactivity-related purposes, the difficult implementation of such policies (due to the lack
of botanical distinction between “hemp” and Cannabis for psychoactivity-related purposes) has lead to a
dramatic decrease in the world production of “hemp”, since the adoption of the 1961 Convention on narcotic
drugs (see graph below41). This context has also dramatically impacted the biodiversity of Cannabis42.
Countries should firmly implement “hemp” policies relying on the total exemption from international drug
control measures planned in the 1961 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs43.
40 “Each Party shall take appropriate measures to prevent illicit cultivation of and to eradicate plants containing narcotic or psychotropic
substances, such as opium poppy, coca bush and cannabis plants, cultivated illicitly in its territory.” (UNODC, 2013. 1988 Convention,
Article 14(2)).
41 FAO, 2018.
42 Clarke and Merlin, 2013.
43 UNODC, 2013. See Article 28.
24 Cannabis & Sustainable Development.
threatened the genetic diversity of crop species as well as associated traditional knowledge. The plant genetic
diversity has become highly vulnerable to “genetic erosion,” and traditional knowledge too faces serious
levels of erosion. In addition, the plant genetic resources and associated traditional knowledge are subjected
to misuse and misappropriation known as “biopiracy.” Therefore, to address these complex issues of plant
genetic resources and traditional knowledge, a number of international instruments/policies have been
developed over the years in the form of treaties, conventions, agreements, etc., to promote conservation and
access of plant genetic resources and traditional knowledge. These policies also promote benefit sharing
arising out of the utilization of these resources as well as prevent the misuse of plant genetic resources and
traditional knowledge through intellectual property protection.”
This evidently includes Cannabis, in the case of which the above-mentioned threats are aggravated by
decades of prohibition. The new international policy context favourable to the protection of genetic
resources, the rights of peasants44, the rights of indigenous people, traditional knowledge (TK), traditional
medicine (T&CM), and traditional cultural expressions needs to apply urgently to traditional Cannabis
growers and their communities.
Facing both anthropogenic and policy threats, farmers and Cannabis growers have organized globally in
reaction to, in particular, the attempts of “eradication”. They increased knowledge and know-how regarding
the botany and genetics of the Cannabis plant, and even created seed banks, contributing to the preservation
and research on the plant’s genetic diversity.
In the State of California, at a critical moment in the development of its Cannabis policy regulations, farmers
and policymakers are working to secure a statutory program which safeguards communities’ genetic
diversity and traditional knowledge with rigorous intellectual property protections. Such a stakeholder-
driven approach to genetic resources could lead to the development of labels such as Appellations of Origin
(AO)45 and set a precedent that could have significant repercussions throughout the world, including those in
peripheral and developing countries.
Appellation of Origin applied to legacy Cannabis-producing regions fulfills the need to match Cannabis
with the new framework of international legal instruments on genetic resources, the rights of peasants,
traditional medicine, TK and cultural expressions – while expanding public access to associated production
supply, including pharmaceutical preparations with verifiable production and product quality standards.
Other initiatives from civil society and the private sector have emerged, such as an archival record of existing
Cannabis cultivars/chemovars46, with the double aim to fill in gaps of the historic record and to preserve the
genetic integrity of these cultivars/chemovars beyond the current trend of patenting Cannabis genetics en
masse. Such initiatives should be supported internationally, even by countries that are still under prohibitive
laws, in order to avoid excluding themselves from the benefits yielded by the development of Cannabis-related
patent in the future.
Ending registers of chemovars and restrictions over cultivation of Cannabis for food purposes.
To differentiate the psychoactivity-related from non psychoactivity-related Cannabis crops, decision-makers
have generally chosen between three options: extending the prohibition to all types, limiting the maximum
allowed percentage of ∆9-THC in the plant’s products, or restricting “hemp” cultivation to a list of selected
cultivars/chemovars. This latter method of allowing only registered strains to be cultivated, implemented
in China, Canada, or the European Union47, is an issue causing concern over the preservation of, and
communities’ rights over, genetic resources, practices, and knowledge associated with unregistered plant
chemovars. It is also a barrier to innovation, research, and development of genetics of interest.
Likewise, is is important to note that there is no scientific evidence whatsoever showing that chemovars low
in ∆9-THC produce better quality nor quantity of seed or fiber than the higher ∆9-THC plant chemovars. Hemp
crops should be differentiated from psychoactivity-related crops using the ratio methodology proposed by
the UNODC, which describes a “simple way of distinguishing between drug-type and fibre-type cannabis is by
using the ratio of the main cannabinoids, THC, CBN and CBD”48:
Promising therapeutic potential has been pointed There is also preliminary evidence supporting
out, to combat nausea, vomiting, anorexia, cachexia, beneficial effect of Cannabis in benzodiazepine
spasticity, Tourette’s syndrome and other movement use reduction or alcohol use disorder withdrawal,
disorders, inflammatory bowel disease and irritable while it has been shown that high prevalence of
bowel syndrome, pain, pruritus, glaucoma, some Cannabis use is statistically associated with low
sorts of epilepsy, asthma, sleep disorders, opioid rates of premature deaths. These element should be
dependency and withdrawal, some psychiatric considered in the design of public health strategies
symptoms, hyperactivity, ADHD, Alzheimer’s disease, on non-communicable diseases.
autoimmune diseases, inflammation and allergies.
Healthcare systems should provide immediate Food and food-products made from Cannabis
compassionate access to patients in these medical seeds are rich in protein, essential amino acids,
conditions, and undertake proper policy regulations glutamic acid, and supply the exact ratio of essential
to provide safe and legal medical access to a variety fatty acids omega-6 and omega-3 the human body
of formulations of Cannabis and cannabinoids. requires. They should be considered, for instance, to
replace animal-proteins.
Although Cannabis use can eventually generate
health hazards, overall use disorders rate are There are real risks related to the presence of
relatively low, and serious adverse events are rare. impurities and adulterants in herbal Cannabis,
Prevention and education to safe, empowered and resin, extracts or other products manufactured in
sensible consumption patterns and methods are the illegal settings. There is urgent need for increased
only tools known for reducing adverse effects and pharmacovigilance, normalization of Cannabis
potential harms. product production and testing options (for
consumers), efficient share and use of collected data
Herbal Cannabis should be further explored by local health and social workers, and training in
tools for nicotine cessation strategies, in particular harm reduction interventions are necessary.
low-THC herbal Cannabis, in countries where “joints”
commonly include tobacco. Driving motor vehicles on the basis of simple
presence of cannabinoids should cease to be
Because prescription herbal Cannabis and criminalized. Bioassays must be abandoned, and
cannabinoids are always associated with a decrease police forces trained to carry out psychometric
in the prescription of opioid painkillers, and because tests; administrative sanctions could apply only in
the degree of access to Cannabis and cannabinoids the cases of actual impaired driving, on the basis of
for medical purposes positively correlates with psychometric tests.
28 Cannabis & Sustainable Development.
Target 3.3
By 2030, end the epidemics of AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria and neglected
tropical diseases and combat hepatitis, water-borne diseases and other
communicable diseases.
Cannabis and its derivatives as pharmaceutical products, and cannabinoids as components of medical
preparations, have shown to be essential elements that contribute to the diversity and thoroughness of
modern medical practitioners’ toolkits.
The current status of scheduling and international control over Cannabis products (expected to change
soon49) has discouraged, if not directly impeded, scientific research on the medical potential of Cannabis and
phytocannabinoids – particularly because publicly funded research has focused primarily only on its “abuse
potential”.
Beyond nausea, vomiting and anorexia, other research, contemplated by the WHO in their scientific
assessment of Cannabis, covers pathologies and symptoms, such as: cachexia, spasticity, Tourette’s
syndrome and other movement disorders, inflammatory bowel disease and irritable bowel syndrome, pain,
pruritus, glaucoma, epilepsy, asthma, sleeping disorders, dependency and withdrawal, psychiatric symptoms,
hyperactivity, ADHD, Alzheimer’s disease, autoimmune diseases, inflammation to name the most documented
ones53. The European Union drugs agency recognized in December 2018 that, although evidence was missing,
the potential benefits of Cannabis-based and cannabinoid medicines were relevant for “Nausea and vomiting
associated with cancer chemotherapy”, as an “Appetite stimulant in patients with AIDS-related wasting”, for
“Muscle spasm in patients with multiple sclerosis”, “CNCP, including neuropathic pain”, “Palliative care for
cancer”, “Intractable childhood epilepsy”, and “other medical uses, such as sleep disorders, anxiety disorders,
depression, degenerative neurological disorders, and inflammatory bowel disease”54, and recently, the WHO
declared that a “number of countries have explored potential therapeutic applications of cannabis-derived
products or cannabis-based medicines. This interest has resulted in a rapid rise in quality scientific work on
the medical use of cannabis-derived products, and there is evidence that these products can have effective
therapeutic applications.”55
Given this growing evidence, it is vital to foster independent research by promoting public investment. But
in the meantime, healthcare systems should provide immediate compassionate access to patients in these
medical conditions, and undertake proper policy regulations to provide safe and legal medical access to a
variety of formulations of Cannabis and cannabinoids.
Target 3.4
By 2030, reduce by one-third premature mortality from non-communicable
diseases through prevention and treatment and promote mental health and
well-being.
Target 3.5
Strengthen the prevention and treatment of substance abuse, including
narcotic drug abuse and harmful use of alcohol.
Target 3.a
Strengthen the implementation of the World Health Organization Framework
Convention on Tobacco Control in all countries, as appropriate.
Besides the positive applications of Cannabis and Cannabis-based medicines for the treatment of non-com-
municable diseases (NCDs) and in the relief of NCDs’ symptoms, achieving targets 3.4 and 3.5 also intends to
address and reduce Cannabis products-use disorders and use-related harms.
Use disorders are estimated to affect 9% of adult people who use herbal Cannabis during their lifetime57.
Although data is difficult to aggregate, it is interesting to compare these numbers to those referring to lifetime
users of tobacco (32% for nicotine), heroin (23%, cocaine (17%) and alcohol (15%)58. Positive public health
outcomes have been achieved in terms of prevalence of use and use disorders related to tobacco and alcohol,
but only thanks to public health evidence-based approaches (mainly prevention, quality controls, and non-
stigmatizing healthcare systems).
Regular adult Cannabis use has moderate outputs on individual health. These are subtle, and extremely rarely,
fatal. According to the European Monitoring Center on Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) the “short-
term health risks associated with the medical use of cannabis and cannabinoids, as reported in trials, were
similar to those of other commonly used medicines and related to symptoms such as dizziness, dry mouth,
disorientation, nausea, euphoria, confusion and somnolence. Serious adverse events were rare.”59
Tackling Cannabis use disorders and adverse effects is possible and is a key element to contribute to better
mental health and well-being for all. And so far, prevention and education to safe, empowered and sensible
consumption patterns and methods are the only tools known for reducing adverse effects and potential
harms60.
In the last 30 years, harm reduction has positioned itself as an efficient method to tackle chronic drug-related
use disorders61. Driven by the HIV/AIDS epidemic, physicians and peer user groups have developed strategies
aimed at minimizing the consequent adverse, individual, public health, and social consequences of drug use
disorders. Harm reduction covers appropriate therapy programmes, thoughtful consumption devices and
equipment, analysis of the products composition, potency, and contaminants, and other similar interventions
that prioritize health determinants and well-being over substance use withdrawal. A complete spectrum of
harm reduction practices, tools, and commodities are nowadays mainstream in healthcare systems, although
insufficient. Yet, Cannabis-related use has also been a focus of harm-reductionists, and strategies to tackle
Cannabis product-related abuse and dependence exist.62
Most developments of harm reduction practices has happened at the community-level, while national policies
and strategies were focusing on “drug supply reduction” over individual and public health approaches. Health-
oriented programs and strategies were mostly taking the form of coercive or compulsory treatment, aimed
at reaching abstinence. These State-led approaches have shown their inefficiency at preventing the use,
addressing use disorders, and in reducing harms of substances.
Today’s lege artis good practices clearly orient health action on drugs and Cannabis towards education,
prevention, and harm reduction, in particular through information on composition, the presence of
contaminants, and titration (e.g., product analysis), but also with education and assistance to safe routes of
administration routes (e.g., vaporization). Public policies should take stock of the achievements of locally-
designed and implemented harm reduction programs, and increase funding and technical support for health
and social care professionals.
Medical research has increased interest in evaluating the potential of Cannabis-based medicines for
widespread NCDs, such as asthma and respiratory diseases, alcohol use disorder withdrawal, or the
reduction in benzodiazepine use64. The study of CB1 and CB2 receptors65 in the human body’s immune
system cells is starting to show the way endocannabinoids function as immunomodulators. This knowledge
provides an opening for cannabinoids as promisingly useful therapeutic agents66 to combat oxidative-
associated diseases, cerebrovascular accidents, such as thromboembolic or hemorrhagic stroke, autoimmune
diseases (Crohn’s disease, rheumatoid arthritis, diabetes), free radical diseases, inflammatory diseases, lupus,
cataract formation, gastric ulcers, and neoplasia among others.
Harm reduction approaches have also been shown to reduce risk factors for a number of NCDs. Recent
studies have focused on the possible properties of cannabidiol (or “CBD”, one of the naturally-occurring
cannabinoids of the Cannabis plant) as an intervention tool for substance use disorders67.
Exploring the potential of Cannabis in opioid use withdrawal and substitution therapies.
Increased research has shown that Cannabis and cannabinoids interact with opioid receptors in a manner
that can be understood, monitored, and integrated into treatment designs. Places with a historical overview of
the legal uses of Cannabis products for medical purposes bring interesting data from pharmacovigilance and
epidemiology studies: The increased availability of prescription
Prescription herbal Cannabis and cannabinoids are always associated with a decrease in the prescription of
opioid painkillers73. Furthermore, the degree of access to Cannabis and cannabinoids for medical purposes
seems to be positively correlated with the reduction of opioid use disorders74.
This can bring added therapeutic value in prescription drug programs for pain75, allowing opioid-cannabinoid
intermixed treatments and reducing the adversity of opioid use disorders. Cannabinoids could also be
contemplated in illicit opioid use substitution therapies, in association with conventional pharmaceutical tools.
Fighting tobacco and nicotine use disorders: modulating herbal Cannabis use disorders.
Dried flowers & fruits of psychoactivity-related Cannabis (known as “buds”, “flowers” or “herbal Cannabis”)
with low levels of ∆9-THC are sold legally in a number of countries, including in some jurisdictions where
the possession or use of Cannabis-based products is theoretically prohibited. In Switzerland, these herbal
Cannabis products – sold as tobacco substitutes76 – are used by regular cannabis consumers to mitigate their
THC intake77. Cannabis-based products are indeed promising tools for tobacco cessation strategies78.
There are also pathways to using low-∆9-THC and/or high-CBD Cannabis products as substitution tools to
address high-∆9-THC herbal Cannabis use disorders.
These are important elements which are key to implement the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco
Control.
Target 3.6
By 2020, halve the number of global deaths and injuries from road traffic
accidents.
The relation of Cannabis and cannabinoids with road traffic accidents is difficult to establish83, due to the
difficulty in determining whether people are under the influence at the moment of the traffic accident: Most
data refer to people having consumed Cannabis products prior to the accident, not necessarily being under the
influence.
In studies of non-fatal collisions, and when levels involved are below 5 nanograms of ∆9-THC per milliliter of
blood, most case-control studies revealed no increase, if not a decrease of the risks of having a road traffic
accident84. And indeed, the well-known empirically safe patterns of driving by people who use Cannabis
products adds to the difficulty of weighing the pros and cons.
79 See the video of the conference “Case Study - Cannabis & Elderly People: Harm Reduction, Hospice & Palliative Care” from the Interna-
tional Cannabis Policy Conference (2018): youtu.be/RXtl1yhSXZE
80 American Horticultural Therapy Association, 2013.
81 Van Den Berg, 2005.
82 See also Goal 2.
83 Canadian Drug Policy Coalition, 2017.
84 Ramaekers et al., 2002; Meulemans et al., 1996; Marquet et al., 1998; Movig et al., 2004; and Waller et al., 1997; as referenced by
Bertrand, 2018.
Paving the way for the next decade in Cannabis and hemp policies. 35
The analysis of data over 22 years has shown that laws permitting medical cannabis do not have a significant
effect on the number of people who use Cannabis products involved in fatal road traffic accidents85.
A recent meta-analysis86 and national data on road accidents87, which included a comparison on the notion
of recent consumption (either by blood test or by self-report), concluded that the added risk of having an
accident is 1.92 for Cannabis products, compared to 8.5 for alcohol, 3 for the use of mobile phone while
driving, and 2 for benzodiazepines88.
Yet, Norwegian researshers found that people who use Cannabis are “far more likely to have lost their right
to drive than those in treatment for alcohol problems.”89 Trace amounts of cannabinoids in blood are typically
detectable for 1 to 2 days after the moment of consumption, although there are reports where detection was
still positive after 25 days90. In urine, ∆9-THC is detectable during between 3 and 30 days after the moment
of consumption91. In a review of presence of cannabinoids in human oral fluids (saliva), it was found that
detection was possible from 1 to 3 days after the moment of consumption for occasional users, and between
1 to 29 days for regular users92.
However, not only the machines used for saliva testing are woefully unreliable93 and unpredictable94, but the
use of drug saliva tests by law enforcement cause serious concerns in terms of discrimination95: Saliva tests
used for Cannabis often entail administrative or penal consequences when the mere presence of cannabinoids
is detected96 – while there is an evidence-based threshold for alcohol, below which drivers are not considered
“under the influence”97. In other jurisdictions, arbitrary thresholds lacking any base of evidence are used to
determine when penal sanctions should apply, although these thresholds are unrelated with the effect of the
product98. As traces of cannabinoids can be present for several weeks, drivers can be tested positive even
after the effects of the product have stopped for days99.
In addition, Martinez Óro and Romaní Alfonso (2016, p. 39) note that “in cases of accidents, liability is
attributed without any doubt to the driver under the effects of a controlled substance. Demonstrating to the
insurers that the main cause were climatic factors or third parties, and not drugs, represents a titanic task.”
Evidence-based policies should be applied in all cases. And laws proven to be discriminative should
be repealed. Driving motor vehicles on the basis of simple presence of cannabinoids should cease to
be criminalized. But given the impossibility of determining thresholds incompatible with driving from the
measurement of THC levels in the blood, and given the lack of clear causal connection between Cannabis use
and road traffic accidents and fatalities, Bertrand (2018) recommends to “abandon bioassays, and train police
forces to carry out psychometric tests to determine the cases of impaired driving” and to only punish with
administrative sanctions “impaired driving (on the basis of psychometric tests).”100
Target 3.d
Strengthen the capacity of all countries, in particular developing countries, for
early warning, risk reduction and management of national and global health
risks.
Early warning alerts for health-related risk reduction matters under illegal Cannabis markets. Risks of
impurities, contaminants and adulteration of herbal Cannabis (as well as resin, extracts or other products
manufactured in illegal settings) is real. International institutions have documented Cannabis resin sold in
the illicit market as containing harmful contaminants from 1953101 to present102. The variety and variability of
cutting agents used in Cannabis resin constitutes a major health risk and hazard. Feedbacks from “users and
cannabis watchers often mention the presence, sometimes in large quantities, of soil, henna, paraffin wax,
bee wax, rosin, glue, flour, liquorice, milk powder, coffee, used motor oil, animal excrement, or even medical
drugs”103, and are supported by the results of the British Cannabis Resin Impurities Survey Project (CRISP)104,
which found that resin seized often showed very high levels of contaminants, sometimes up to 80% of the
weight of the product.
Increased pharmacovigilance, normalization of Cannabis product production and testing analysis (both by
relevant public authorities and by civil society and the private sector), efficient share and use of collected
data by local health and social workers, and training in harm reduction interventions are necessary steps to
strengthen countries’ early warning and risk reduction systems facing drug use-related hazards.
100 Bertrand, 2018. See under section “Les recommandations politiques NORML France”
101 UNODC, 1953.
102 EMCDDA, 2012.
103 Chouvy, 2016.
104 “Cannabis Resin Impurities Survey Project conducted preliminary research in 2001 on five samples of Moroccan ‘soap-bar’ resin pro-
vided by Customs & Excise. It was found that the psychoactive adulterants included glue (benzene and toluene), ketamine, caffeine, and
aspirin – while other additives, varying in toxicity, included liquorice, milk powder, boot polish, beeswax, turpentine, henna, vinyl, motor oil,
dyes, pine resin, animal shit, soil, and phenols” (Montgomery, 2002).
QUALITY EDUCATION
Ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning
opportunities for all.
The barriers to research and the lack of The knowledge gap on the professions required
knowledge-sharing that prohibition has resulted to operate in legally regulated Cannabis markets
in numerous gaps in ethnobotanical, health and (biosciences, horticultural, agronomics, consumers
safe consumption knowledge, that public policies good fabrication, sales, etc.) should benefit from
should seek to promote prevention and education the financial resources created by Cannabis market
on Cannabis products use that is grounded in regulations, to fund professionals’ training, as well as
evidence-based information, non-judgmental, open to cultural and environmental education.
interactive dialogue, meaningfully inclusive, delivered
by trained facilitators or peers, that includes harm A way to provide opportunities for youth and
reduction, and that pays attention to overlapping adults with efficient, but unrecognized technical
issues of racism, social justice, and stigma. and entrepreneurship skills related to Cannabis:
funding educational programs that target young
Evidence-based and peer-led education and adults already involved in illegal Cannabis-related
prevention in primary schools is necessary to help activities (in particular cultivation, processing, and
young people make smarter, more informed choices retail) to enhance existing skills while dignifying and
on Cannabis products use later on. preserving traditional knowledge.
Target 4.4
By 2030, substantially increase the number of youth and adults who have
relevant skills, including technical and vocational skills, for employment,
decent jobs and entrepreneurship.
3- supply 7- development
(b) (h) (j)
The increased financial resources introduced by Cannabis market regulations can be partly redirected
towards the training of the professionals required to operate in regulated markets (biosciences, horticultural,
agronomics, consumers good fabrication, sales, etc.). They can also be shunted to cultural and environmental
education. Such educational programs, targeting young adults already involved in illegal Cannabis-related
activities (in particular cultivation, processing, and retail), would enhance existing skills while dignifying and
preserving TK. These are ways to provide opportunities for legal employment outcomes for youth and adults
with efficient, but unrecognized technical and entrepreneurship skills.
Target 4.7
By 2030, ensure that all learners acquire the knowledge and skills needed
to promote sustainable development, including, among others, through
education for sustainable development and sustainable lifestyles, human
rights, gender equality, promotion of a culture of peace and non-violence,
global citizenship and appreciation of cultural diversity and of culture’s
contribution to sustainable development.
1- demand 4- rights
(a) (c) (d) (e) (h) (g) (i) (o) (q) (f)
6- cooperation 7- development
(d) (h) (j)
40 Cannabis & Sustainable Development.
Increasing the creation and dissemination of all knowledge concerning the Cannabis plant would contribute
to the appreciation of cultural diversity and the preservation of ethnobotanical knowledge, facilitating a culture
of sustainable development. Increased research and non-stigmatizing, non-discriminatory, evidence-informed,
and unbiased prevention and education are also urgently needed for quality modern education programs and
systems.
Ethnobotanical knowledge and information about Cannabis have been minimal during the last decades.
This is related to the barriers preventing research and the lack of knowledge-sharing the international drug
control system has caused, but also partly due to stigmatization and criminalization, which have promoted
bias and legitimated misinformation. These factors have impeded the dissemination of harm reduction
information related to the use of products derived from the Cannabis plant. A comprehensive compilation
of efficient contemporary education and prevention for Cannabis use, focused on the youth, defined the
principles that should guide education programs on Cannabis use: grounded in evidence-based information;
non-judgmental, open dialogue that uses interactive approaches; meaningfully inclusive; delivered by a
trained facilitator or by a peer; an education started earlier, with age-appropriate content; supportive to open
parent-child communication; including harm reduction; tailored to the specific context; and paying attention
to overlapping issues of racism, social justice, and stigma107. These approaches can be promoted by public
health policies108, and even meet with the international WHO guidelines for prevention and primary care109.
However, harm reduction and honest, evidence-based prevention are the only public policy tools that have
shown efficiency in mitigating the adverse public health effects of Cannabis products use. Because in
almost every country, “spending on drug control exceeds investment in harm reduction”110 and prevention, it
is urgent that authorities start shifting their drug and Cannabis policy budgets towards an increase in public
funding for education, prevention and harm reduction programs.
Many young people grow up in areas where DTOs are actively implemented, and economic activity is centered
around illicit crops, mainly Cannabis. Proposing alternative legally regulated livelihoods associated with this
plant could greatly contribute to the promotion of a culture of peace, non-violence, and the rule of law111.
Target 5.1
End all forms of discrimination against all women and girls everywhere.
Target 5.a
Undertake reforms to give women equal rights to economic resources, as well
as access to ownership and control over land and other forms of property,
financial services, inheritance and natural resources, in accordance with
national laws.
6- cooperation 7- development
(d) (h) (j)
Women are disproportionately affected – and impoverished – by prohibitive and repressive Cannabis and
drug control policies112, suffering particularly from discriminatory policies by law enforcement and an
overwhelmingly harsh judicial system113. Since women are often a primary financial contributor to families and
communities, the consequences of such policies affect the community as a whole.
In some countries, specific criminal justice measures targeting women, such as the withdrawal of child
custody or the hampering of the exercise of family rights, occur – with devastating consequences for
families and communities.
Female involvement in illicit Cannabis-related activities also encapsulates negative collateral outputs116.
According to UNODC, “some women involved in trafficking in drugs are victims of trafficking in persons,
including trafficking for the purposes of sexual exploitation. Women’s participation in the drug supply chain
can often be attributed to vulnerability and oppression, where they are forced to act out of fear”117.
In addition, the differential impact of the Cannabis-related problems and policies on women makes these
particularly needed in the design, development, and implementation of a framework to promote, enforce,
and monitor gender equality and non-discrimination. International, national, and local strategies regarding
Cannabis products use & health not only should adopt woman-specific approaches, but also consider women
and affected populations’ involvement at all levels.
Providing equal rights and access to ownership and control over land.
Similar to what is explained under target 1.4, achieving Goal 5 implies the repeal of policies that include
provisions for asset forfeiture and seizure of a Cannabis farmers’ land – where women have a predominant
role and suffer from disproportionately repressive outcomes.
While women are often responsible for the cultivation of illicit crops, they are likely not land owners since less
than 20% of women in the world are land owners.
The capacities of Cannabis fibers for both Market development of carbon nanosheets
production and storage of energy can help ensure for electrodes made out from residual wastes of
sustainable, reliable, and green energy for all, while Cannabis plants, that outperform standard graphene-
decreasing dependency on fossil resources. based supercapacitors, should be encouraged.
Indoor Cannabis cultivation using artificial light, Incentives to sustainable cultivation patterns
heat, ventilation, humidity systems, automation, should be mainstreamed in Cannabis-related policy
and irrigation are fruit of prohibitive policies: legal reforms, and include tools such as standardization,
regulations should seek to incentivize greenhouse incentives of professional field-bodies able to edit
or outdoor methods of cultivation that have less peer guidelines, limitation of the rate of indoor
detrimental impact on the environment, and have an cultivation authorized per business, or application of
extremely low carbon footprint. a carbon-tax model to indoor Cannabis cultivation
facilities.
Paving the way for the next decade in Cannabis and hemp policies. 47
Target 7.1
By 2030, ensure universal access to affordable, reliable and modern energy
services.
Target 7.2
By 2030, increase substantially the share of renewable energy in the global
energy mix.
Target 7.3
By 2030, double the global rate of improvement in energy efficiency.
Target 7.a
By 2030, enhance international cooperation to facilitate access to clean
energy research and technology, including renewable energy, energy efficiency
and advanced and cleaner fossil-fuel technology, and promote investment in
energy infrastructure and clean energy technology.
Non psychoactivity-related derivatives of Cannabis are worthy of inclusion to reach SDG 7, as the plant can
provide both production and storage of energy. Beyond ensuring sustainable, reliable, and green energy
for all, energy-producing and -storing crops such as Cannabis are key to decreasing dependency on fossil
resources, to mitigate climate change.
Recent research has shown that the residual wastes of Cannabis plants can also be turned into carbon
nanosheets that have shown remarkable efficiency to produce electrodes, outperforming standard graphene-
based supercapacitors122.
Aside from the production of standardized Cannabis-based medicine wherein a fully controlled growing
environment is a prerequisite, legal regulations seem to bring a trend towards the abandonment of
warehouse-type Cannabis cultivation in favour of greenhouses123. Growers are viewing greenhouses as an
economical solution (production costs are cut by 30% compared to indoor cultivation) and public authorities
are sometimes encouraging emerging legal Cannabis markets to adopt sustainable production patterns
to reduce their energy consumption and carbon footprint124. Regulating Cannabis policies and promoting
natural sunlight as the primary lighting source rather than electrical sources is key to rationalizing energy
consumption and waste.
Warehouse indoor cultivation of Cannabis sativa L. initially appeared as a strategy for growers to avoid
flagging and eradication of their plantations. Today, indoor cultivation is widely spread, in particular in
developed countries – there is no other crop being so extensively cultivated away from the sunlight.
Indoor Cannabis cultivation – which basically consists of creating an environment similar to natural growing
conditions for the plants, maintaining high-intensity lighting levels and controlling other parameters, such as
humidity, temperature or air pressure125 – is exceptionally harmful to the environment and energy-wasting.
“Indoor cannabis cultivation uses the largest amount of energy when compared to any other production
method, and creates the largest associated carbon footprint”126. Estimations made in California, United States
indicate that indoor cultivation accounts for about 3% of the State’s electricity use, generating an average of 4
kilograms of CO2 per gram of cannabis cultivated indoor127.
In Colorado, another state in the same country, the legal regulation of production processes has resulted in
an increase in Cannabis cultivation outdoors or in greenhouses. Across this country, in three years, indoor
cultivation decreased from 80% to 65%, to the benefit of the less energy-intensive growing practices (e.g.,
outdoor and greenhouse cultivation)128. Local authorities have created incentives for legal Cannabis cultivation
companies to adapt their production methods, including workshops on natural sunlight cultivation methods,
publication of guidelines, and elements of sound and sustainable practices, etc.129.
Working in illegal settings is inherently unsafe, Legally regulated Cannabis cultivation, manufacture,
unsecure and never as decent as working in legally and trade are suitable to village-development and local
regulated settings. Lack of regulatory protections, employment of women and youth, as most jobs in the
workplace safety oversight and insurance, but also sector are capable of being performed by young people,
constant pressure and treats from DTOs and law or by people with disabilities. It is also suitable for cities
enforcement agencies, make labour in illicit settings a or suburbs where job opportunities are scarce in middle-
preliminary and central target of policy reforms. and high-income countries.
Forced or compulsory labour in relation with illegal The cultivation of Cannabis to tackle depopulation
Cannabis-related activities should be targeted with in remote villages is currently implemented, and
priority, in particular as it relates to exploitation or encourages people to engage in long-term jobs in the
human trafficking. rural Cannabis production sector. Such programmes
should be encouraged as experimentations to foster
Criminalising and judicialization of people who
rural development.
use Cannabis contributes to increasing stigma
and marginalisation, acting as a barrier to job and Governments should assist and monitor the
employment. transition of populations previously involved in Cannabis
cultivation, from an illicit to a regulated and taxed
All forecasts on the development of legally regulated
market, and take particular care in ensuring that legal
markets for Cannabis show the expected positive impact
regulations benefit the people that are reliant on this
on job and employment.
income. Opportunity must be seize to help small-scale
Large legal Cannabis industries develop new farmers transition to legal settings, ensuring that
technologies for cultivation, fertilization, processing, and opportunities are also given to small and medium-scale
manufacturing of the plant. Small-scale cultivators tend operations.
to focus on regenerative agricultural methodologies,
Authorities must ensure that financial and insurance
increases in productivity and sustainability and reduction
services are not denied to legal Cannabis-related
of their environmental impact. Both are needed in
operations.
legally regulated settings. Public policies should adopt
social and sound tax policies that are differentiative, Cannabis has a long historical relationship with
in order to foster local investment and ownership over travels, travelers, and tourism, and the plant magnifies
legal Cannabis operations for all. the development of tourism, particularly in regions where
its use or cultivation are traditional. Yet uncontrolled
In all cases (even for larger businesses) taxes waged
or unregulated tourism can cause social dislocation,
on Cannabis businesses should be reasonable and
loss of cultural heritage, economic dependence or
proportionate, for legal market to compete prices of the
ecological degradation. Sustainable tourism guidelines
illegal market.
and indicators should be contemplated, and multimodal
Cannabis policies should encourage the tourism (combining agro-tourism, eco-tourism,
diversification of Cannabis farms production, relying therapeutic/health tourism) should be preferred.
also on non psychoactivity-related purposes derived
Local communities in traditional areas of cultivation
from the plant, to propose products such as clothing,
would benefit from the potential of Appellations of Origin
cosmetics, paper, food, beer, biofuels, animal bedding,
to promote sustainable tourism, increase job creation,
building materials, insulation, car moldings, and other
community ownership, and promote while preserving
consumer and industrial products.
local cultures, knowledge, and products.
52 Cannabis & Sustainable Development.
Target 8.2
Achieve higher levels of economic productivity through diversification,
technological upgrading and innovation, including through a focus on high-
value-added and labour-intensive sectors.
6- cooperation 7- development
(d) (h) (i) (j) (k) (l)
All Cannabis crops (both small-scale and large industrial scale operations) are labour-intensive. While large
legal Cannabis industries are developing new technologies for cultivation, fertilization, processing, and
manufacturing of the plant, small-scale cultivators tend to focus on regenerative agricultural methodologies
enabling them to increase productivity and sustainability while reducing their environmental impact.
In the United States of America, forecasts show that legal Cannabis industries could produce between $21
and $48 billion in 2022130. Such growth of the market is an important factor that is expected to have a positive
impact on investment and employment, among others. Financial speculation related to the emerging Cannabis
industries should be monitored to ensure that profits are reinvested in the economy. Public policies should
adopt social and sound tax policies that can be differentiative to foster local investment and ownership over
legal Cannabis operations. In all cases, even for larger facilities, the taxes waged on Cannabis businesses
should be reasonable, otherwise legal businesses will hardly competing the underground market in terms of
price point131.
Diversification is a key word for future Cannabis farmers, as diversity is what most characterizes the
Cannabis plant, its possible uses, and the populations that make use of it. An increased use of Cannabis for
non psychoactivity-related purposes can have positive economic consequences, as hundreds of potential
products – including high-value-added products – derived from the plant have been identified, such as
clothing, cosmetics, lotions, shampoos, soaps, paper, food, feed, beer, biofuels, animal bedding, building
materials, insulation, car moldings, among many other consumer and industrial products.
Target 8.3
Promote development-oriented policies that support productive activities,
decent job creation, entrepreneurship, creativity and innovation, and
encourage the formalization and growth of micro-, small- and medium-sized
enterprises, including through access to financial services.
Target 8.5
By 2030, achieve full and productive employment and decent work for all
women and men, including for young people and persons with disabilities,
and equal pay for work of equal value.
Target 8.6
By 2020, substantially reduce the proportion of youth not in employment,
education or training.
Target 9.2
Promote inclusive and sustainable industrialization and, by 2030, significantly
raise industry’s share of employment and gross domestic product, in line with
national circumstances, and double its share in least developed countries.
Legal Cannabis markets create job opportunities, promote innovation of new products (in particular, with
diversified crops merging Cannabis cultivation for both psychoactivity-related and non psychoactivity-related
purposes), and can encourage the growth of locally owned businesses of all sizes if socially sustainable
policies are implemented. During the year after US state of Colorado regulated adult use sales, the legal
Cannabis-related sector created 18,000 full-time equivalent job positions in-state and a US$2.4 billion
54 Cannabis & Sustainable Development.
economic revenue132. In Uruguay, it was estimated that the different legal operations generated the equivalent
of US$22 million, with unaffected prevalence rates133, making likely that this amount was directly taken
from the margins of profit of DTOs134. Cannabis cultivation, manufacture, and trade are suitable to village-
development and local employment of women and youth, as most jobs in the sector are capable of being
performed by young people, or by people with disabilities. Policies are key.
This is not only valid for Cannabis farmers, as “even in middle- and high-income countries, in cities or
suburbs where job opportunities are scarce and social cohesion is weak, drug trafficking and dealing may
represent attractive opportunities in the absence of better alternatives in the legal economy”135.
Meanwhile, the evidence that “criminalising people who use drugs merely increases stigma and
marginalisation, acting as a barrier to education, employment, health and social services” still stands
unaddressed136.
In developed countries, a large number of youth are unemployed and live outside of urban settlements –
which adds difficulty when looking for job or education opportunities. In Poland, young people are forced
to move to cities to overcome these issues137. In Spain where the same problems exist, the adversities of
post-2008 economic crisis led villages to launch calls for the cultivation of Cannabis as a measure to tackle
their depopulation, with the aim to mobilize people to stay and engage in long-term jobs in the local sector of
Cannabis production138.
Assisting and monitoring the transition of populations involved in Cannabis cultivation from an illicit market
to a regulated and taxed market is key to achieving Goal 8. Authorities should take particular care in ensuring
that legal regulations of local or international trade in Cannabis-based products benefit the populations that
are reliant on this income, and seize the opportunity to help small-scale farmers transition to legal settings139.
Regulating authorities should also ensure that financial services are not denied to legal Cannabis-related
operations140, and that equal opportunities are given to small and medium-scale operations rather than
exclusively to large corporate companies.
Target 8.8
Protect labour rights and promote safe and secure working environments for
all workers, including migrant workers, in particular women migrants, and
those in precarious employment.
Target 16.2
End abuse, exploitation, trafficking and all forms of violence against and
torture of children.
4- rights 5- trends
(d) (u) (v) (x) (y)
6- cooperation 7- development
(d) (h) (i) (j) (k) (l)
Working in illegal settings is inherently less safe, secure and decent than working in legally regulated
settings. Not only the absolute lack of regulatory protections, workplace safety oversight and insurance, but
also constant pressure and treats from DTOs and law enforcement agencies, make labour in illicit settings be
a critical element in achieving Goal 8.
The involvement in illicit drug- and Cannabis-related activities is a major source of lack of labour rights, when
not direct exploitation, forced, or compulsory labour, or human trafficking141. Children and youth are not left
apart142 – they are known to be particularly vulnerable to forced recruitment for “illicit activities, in particular
for the production and trafficking of drugs”143.
The International Labour Organization (ILO) finds that “forced labour is [...] organized [...] around international
criminal gangs who find the trafficking of humans to be less dangerous than trafficking of drugs. Much forced
labour involves underground or illegal activities and is otherwise hidden from public view”144.
Although there is a shortage of data on this topic, forced, or compulsory labour in relation with illegal
Cannabis-related activities controlled by DTOs is starting to be studied. In Ireland, researchers found that
the lack of data on the trafficking in human beings for purposes of illicit Cannabis cultivation, and the lack
of awareness by authorities, was leading potential victims to be prosecuted, convicted, or imprisoned for
offences they may have been forced to commit145.
Target 8.9
By 2030, devise and implement policies to promote sustainable tourism that
creates jobs and promotes local culture and products.
Target 12.b
Develop and implement tools to monitor sustainable development impacts
for sustainable tourism that creates jobs and promotes local culture and
products.
Repression rather than diminishing traffic displaces it and increases its levels of associated violence. For
that reason, policy reforms seem rather the only way to offer labour rights to people involved in Cannabis
cultivation, processing, or trade and to put an end to exploitation and compulsory labour.
Cannabis has a long historical relationship with travels, travelers, and tourism146. Besides a decrease in
Cannabis-related tourism conveyed by the progressive implementation of the international drug control
Treaties – in particular, the 1961 Convention provision for eliminating all non-medical traditional uses within
25 years147 – travels motivated by personal, cultural or therapeutic interest in Cannabis has persisted. Under
the impulsion of the ongoing processes of policy reforms worldwide, this sector is currently experiencing
unprecedented opportunities148 of developing in legal and sustainable settings.
Tourism by itself is already “one of the world’s fastest growing industries and is a major source of income
for many countries. Being a people-oriented industry, tourism also provides many jobs which have helped
revitalise local economies.”149 Cannabis magnifies the development of tourism, particularly in regions where
its use or cultivation are traditional.
Yet, like other forms of development, uncontrolled or unregulated tourism “can also cause its share of
problems, such as social dislocation, loss of cultural heritage, economic dependence and ecological
degradation”150, and Cannabis-related tourism can be a source of added trouble for local populations151, in
particular when clear policy regulations are missing152.
The importance of Cannabis in the choice of a destination for travel is an element that should not be
overlooked. Two main elements drive the choice of a destination for travelers interested in Cannabis153:
non-repressive Cannabis policies or recent policy normalization processes (like in the Netherlands154, or in
the US states of Washington and Colorado155, where legal adult use policies have led to a boost in some
tourism sectors) or known traditions and culture around the Cannabis plant (a “quest for authenticity”, valid in
Morocco156, India157, Jamaica158, but also California159, Barcelona160, etc.).
CARICOM, a multilateral organization grouping 15 Caribbean countries – that all have an important historicity
of Cannabis – declares that “the region’s already established and developing tourism economy can be
leveraged further by a cannabis industry located in safe and secure environments. Cannabis can be
produced for export as well as for local healing and can be the foundation for a new and vibrant wellness
tourism industry”161. While noting the “potential for the use of [Cannabis] for developing the medical […] and
recreational [Cannabis] tourism markets” they note that “[all] of these policy decisions will require targeted
law reform. For example, the amended Jamaica law 2015 does not fully liberalise the tourist market. Rather, it
requires visitors to obtain a special permission to access [Cannabis].”162
National and local policies that contemplate creating AO163 for regulated Cannabis markets could also take
advantage of AO’s potential to promote sustainable tourism, increase job creation, community ownership,
and promote local cultures, knowledge, and products.
Local communities in traditional areas of cultivation, which by nature are rural and face challenges for
economic development and integration, would primarily benefit from such programs of intellectual property
protection. The recognition and value added for local products, cultivation practices, and chemovars164 can
meaningfully contribute to meeting target 8.9 by strengthening the competitiveness of a region in the tourism
sector, while achieving the broader Sustainable Development Agenda. Indeed, it is already documented for
products other than Cannabis that AO intellectual property protections – and resultant market recognition of
a region – “have enormous assets in relation to the positive repercussions they generate in the economy as a
whole (job creation, opportunities in other sectors such as tourism, brake the rural exodus), the protection of
environment, gender issues, preservation of traditional knowledge and biodiversity, etc.”165 Finally, the potential
for combining agro-tourism, eco-tourism, and therapeutic or health tourism would likely abound in a Cannabis
producing region with an Appellation of Origin system in place.
Public policy reforms of Cannabis should integrate sustainable tourism indicators166 in the design and
monitoring of policy impacts and consider valorizing regions of tradition as potential fuel for tourism and
protecting them as a potential target for mass-tourism.
Target 9.4
By 2030, upgrade infrastructure and retrofit industries to make them
sustainable, with increased resource-use efficiency and greater adoption of
clean and environmentally sound technologies and industrial processes, with
all countries taking action in accordance with their respective capabilities
Target 9.5
Enhance scientific research, upgrade the technological capabilities of
industrial sectors in all countries, in particular developing countries, including,
by 2030, encouraging innovation and substantially increasing the number of
research and development workers per 1 million people and public and private
research and development spending.
Target 11.c
Support least developed countries, including through financial and technical
assistance, in building sustainable and resilient buildings utilizing local
materials.
6- cooperation 7- development
(d) (h) (i) (j) (k) (l)
As explained under Goal 1 and 2, the so-called “hemp”-type chemovars of Cannabis (plants grown for non
psychoactivity-related purposes) have multiple derived marketable products. Among these, a series of building
materials can be manufactured from the fibers of the stalk of the Cannabis plant.
62 Cannabis & Sustainable Development.
Products of the Cannabis plant have proven to efficiently replace synthetic or petroleum-based materials,
providing high performance and environmentally-friendly products. Among these, the most notable products
that can contribute to upgrading infrastructures and making them sustainable, efficient, and clean are:
• Concrete: Cannabis fiber-made concrete (“hempcrete167”), a mixture of the plant’s hurds and lime
used either directly for construction, or insulation purposes. Lime and hurds chemically react and
bind the mixture together, which continues to solidify over time, ensuring a strong and resistant
material168.
• Industrial oils: Oil pressed from the seeds of the Cannabis plant are ideal to use for manufacturing
paints and sealants. Its superior performance – devoid of volatile organic compounds or hazardous
air pollutants – provides high protection from the inside out, for wood sealants, in particular.
• Plastic and composites: Biocomposites made with part of Cannabis fibers are being developed for
a range of products (polypropylene, polyethylene, polyester) allowing interior or exterior uses of the
material. Biocomposites containing Cannabis fibers are resistant, durable, and cost-effective. The
material is already used commercially for products, such as furniture, roofing shingles, or bioplastic
for the car industry169 (in particular, for cars package trays, door panels, window pillars, or luggage
racks).
• The carbon sequestration and storage properties of Cannabis fiber-based bioplastics and
biocomposites through photosynthesis is a remarkable additional advantage of Cannabis-based
building for infrastructure sustainability170.
It should be noted that, in addition, the Cannabis plant also sequesters carbon dioxide during its growth phase
(each kilogram of hemp sequesters about 1.8 to 2 kilograms of carbon dioxide171), constituting an excellent
geoengineering strategy to overcome the adverse impacts of climate change, foster climate resilience and low
greenhouse gas emissions in a manner that does not threaten food production.
Public policies should seek to foster local production and supply of these materials locally to create
“kilometre zero” markets for infrastructure construction and rehabilitation materials.
Goal 10 will never be met as long as Cannabis Because the overwhelming majority of those
and other drug use, possession, and other related accused or convicted for Cannabis-related offences
activities continue to be judicialized and as long as are part of ethnic minorities, migrants, foreign
users, possessors, or other affected people continue national, asylum seekers or people in irregular
to be criminalized, stigmatized, and undermined in situation, indigenous and native populations, socially
their rights. marginalized people and young people, Cannabis
policy reforms need mechanisms targeted at these
The “drug courts” system that justifies a system groups, and needs to monitor the impact of reforms
of exceptionality, an expeditious justice, and a undertaken on these populations.
continued unjustified judicialization, and that
reaffirms criminal justice as central in the public There is a need to superpose various models of
policy response to health-related hazards, should be production, supply, and access: Home growing and
discontinued. Cannabis peers clubs (to respect the right to privacy
and freedom of association); specific supply for
Sustainable Cannabis policies should address medical access (to leave no one behind); for-profit
equality of opportunities and non-discrimination: adult use market. Multimodal regulation is needed,
not restricting access to legal markets for people as recreational demand risks overwhelming a
with prior drug-related convictions, and addressing monomodal regulation model.
barriers to entry into the legally regulated Cannabis
industry for communities who have been harmed the
most by the prohibitionist policies.
Target 10.1
By 2030, progressively achieve and sustain income growth of the bottom 40
per cent of the population at a rate higher than the national average.
3- supply 4- rights
(b) (d) (a) (i)
6- cooperation 7- development
(d) (b) (h) (i) (j) (k) (l)
Taking into account the specificities of the Cannabis plant, its markets, and its ethnobotany, and integrating
the elements stated under Goals 1 to 9 of this report into national Cannabis policy reform is necessary to
achieve rapid income growth for the poor.
With more complex products and means of production, added burdens of standardisation, compliance,
licensing, product testing, packaging, overhead and insurance costs, traditional growers might face difficulties
in accessing legally regulated markets – calling for specific protections and accompaniment in the transition.
These could rely on the example of Cannabis social club-type models or on intellectual property protections.
Target 10.2
By 2030, empower and promote the social, economic and political inclusion
of all, irrespective of age, sex, disability, race, ethnicity, origin, religion or
economic or other status.
Target 10.3
Ensure equal opportunity and reduce inequalities of outcome, including
by eliminating discriminatory laws, policies and practices and promoting
appropriate legislation, policies and action in this regard.
66 Cannabis & Sustainable Development.
Target 16.b
Promote and enforce non-discriminatory laws and policies for sustainable
development.
As already mentioned, discrimination in policies and practices often disproportionately affect persons
arrested or charged for Cannabis-related offences and are even more disproportionately concerning women,
youth, and minorities. Furthermore, people with a criminal record in relation with “drug offences” – even for
low-level, non-violent offenses – or people with a history of incarceration face serious disadvantages when
accessing employment, housing, health, safety, and welfare assistance.
In its Basis for a theory of imputation in criminal law, Hassemer explains that one of the “characteristics of
modern criminal Justice is the exacerbation of the idea of preventive justice” which “makes always more
difficult to ensure the principle of equality and equal treatment”, citing drug policies as the best representative
example172.
Laws that prohibit and criminalize personal use and possession of Cannabis and other plants, products, or
substances declared illegal, as well as petty non-violent offences related to Cannabis or other drugs, are
clearly discriminatory laws. This opinion is shared by 12 United Nations entities (that address the topics of
health, Human Rights, AIDS, refugees, migrations, children, alimentation, development, populations, women,
labour, education, science, and culture) that made a call to “[review] and [repeal] punitive laws that have
been proven to have negative health outcomes and that counter established public health evidence. These
include laws that criminalize or otherwise prohibit [...] drug use or possession of drugs for personal use”. They
recalled that a central principle of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development is to “ensure that no one is
left behind” and to “reach the furthest behind first”173.
The “drug courts” system, a supposed alternative to incarceration that “have been described as being a form
of collaboration between criminal justice and public health” which turn out to be a “quasi-compulsory”174 have
been actively implemented in recent years all around the world175. Yet, drug courts are in fact not than much
of an alternative, but rather a reinforcing mechanism of discrimination (in particular against women176) that
justifies a system of exceptionality, an expeditious justice, and a continued unjustified judicialization of people
who use or possess Cannabis or other drugs for their own use, reaffirming criminal Justice as central in the
public policy response to health-related hazards of controlled drugs177.
Goal 10 will never be met as long as Cannabis and other drug use, possession, and other related activities
continue to be judicialized and as long as users, possessors, or other affected people continue to be
criminalized, stigmatized, and undermined in their right to privacy178.
Reforming these public policies – backed by the international drug control Treaty system – and ending these
practices is urgent to scale-up the rights and inclusion of the populations left to illicit Cannabis markets,
and offer them the possibility to positively participate in the prosperity and development of their societies,
enabling them the right to access healthcare and treatment, ownership over land, transport or communication
tools, and savings.
Addressing equality of opportunities and non-discrimination means targeting those who have been harmed
the most by the prohibitionist policies of the past with specific inclusiveness and equity programs: those
populations should have priority in benefiting from legal regulations. Because Cannabis policies have been
recognized to often violate fundamental rights, people affected should be granted their right to remedy and
reparation in the case of gross human rights violations183, which concretely includes the right to cessation
175 e.g. in Australia (Birgden, 2008), France (Mission Interministérielle de Lutte contre les Drogues et les Conduites Addictives, 2015),
Pakistan (Rahman and Crofts, 2013), USA (Hennessy and Pallone, 2001), Venezuela (Rosales et al., 2008, p. 57.)
176 Giacomello, 2018.
177 ibid.; and Guzmán Rodríguez, 2012.
178 EMCDDA, 2019.
179 Suprema Corte de Justicia de la Nación, 2018; and Embury-Dennis, 2018.
180 Constitutional Court of Georgia/საქართველოს საკონსტიტუციო სასამართლო, 2018.
181 Constitutional Court of South Africa, 2018(1&2).
182 Bureau of Cannabis Control, 2018.
183 Ghehiouèche and Riboulet-Zemouli, 2018.
68 Cannabis & Sustainable Development.
and guarantees of non-repetition, the right to an investigation and to truth, and the right to obtain reparation,
compensation or rehabilitation184.
In Canada, the entry in vigor of Cannabis adult use legal regulations was accompanied by the announce of
steps toward the pardon of non-violent convictions for Cannabis possession185. In the US jurisdictions that
have regulated adult use or decriminalized possession/use, there have been tendencies in both directions: In
some States like Oregon186 or Maryland187, new policies maintained the human rights violations of previous
policies, and added infringement to the rights of people convicted for past Cannabis-related offences, by
negating their right to remedy and reparation (in these States, people with previous conviction for Cannabis-
related offenses are not allowed to enter the legal industry or work for legal cannabis entities). In other
US jurisdictions like Alaska188 and California189, however, steps have been taken to grant reparation and
rehabilitation to people victims of previous illicit Cannabis-related activity, or people imprisoned.
Decision-makers must definitely take stock of the alleged human right violations generated by the Cannabis
policies that they repeal, and continue working on the numerous proposals for equity and inclusiveness in
legally regulated Cannabis policies190. Governments must foster the insertion of affected populations in the
legal Cannabis market as a solution for post-incarceration reinsertion.
In addition, systematic State-led human rights violations and historically unjust convictions justify the
recourse to retroactive laws or amnesty mechanisms to expunge in a real, permanent and non cancelable
way convictions for previously illegal drug offences.
In addition, the overwhelming majority of those accused or convicted for Cannabis and drug-related offences
(trends are similar for all controlled plants, products and substances, and criminal justice does not make any
distinction regarding the type of drug, no more than regarding the extent of the defendant’s activities in case
of petty traffic192) turns out to be members of ethnic minorities193, migrants, foreign national, asylum seekers
or people in irregular situation194, indigenous and native populations195, socially marginalized people196 and the
youth197. Cannabis policy reforms need mechanisms to monitor their impact on these groups of populations.
192 According to WOLA & TNI, 2011 (p. 5): “in general the legislation does not distinguish between levels of involvement in the business
– treating street sellers and transporters on par with large-scale drug traffickers, and failing to distinguish between violent and nonviolent
offenses. Many persons are sentenced to maximum penalties, and many others, even without having committed serious or violent crimes,
end up in maximum-security prisons. Nor are distinctions made regarding the particular type of substance or the risk to health it poses
when it comes to pursuing, arresting, and prosecuting a person, such that a person selling cannabis may end up with the same sentence
as a person selling cocaine.”
193 Most documented cases come from North America, where discriminations essentially concern African-American, Latin-American
and indigenous populations (See for the USA: ACLU, 2013; Drug Policy Alliance, 2015; Harris et al., 2009; Levy-Pounds, 2009; McElrath et
al., 2016; Wacquant, 2010; and forCanada: Rankin and Contenta, 2017)
194 Nafstad, 2019, p. 8.
195 Weatherburn et al., 2003; and Villaveces Izquierdo, 2008.
196 Díaz Velásquez et al., 2016.
197 Brusco, 2016; Cano Menoni, 2014; and Saintout, 2014.
198 Extracted from ACLU, 2013, p. 66.
199 ibid., p. 48.
70 Cannabis & Sustainable Development.
In some cities (like in Spain, Belgium or Uruguay200), the obstacles to self cultivation in urban and peri-
urban areas led home growers to join and create non-for-profit entities – organized as insular societies,
but respecting local laws on non-profit entities – behind which the activities of shared cultivation were
undertaken201, protected by the freedom of association202. Called “Cannabis social clubs203” these peer-led
non-for-profit operations are described like “an innovative and original human-scale model for cannabis
regulation204” where the limited profits generated by limited scope and mandatory membership impedes the
entities from becoming too-large operations. Rarely overpassing a couple of hundred members, Cannabis
social clubs redirect their profits to the costs of production, rent, insurance, commodities, and wages for
people in charge of cultivation205.
While Cannabis policy reform is often seen as a choice between different options, incompatibles one with
the other206, it is not only possible to superpose various models207 of production, supply, and access: it is
absolutely necessary. In properly-regulated policy landscape, home growing and Cannabis peers clubs should
be allowed, to respect the right to privacy and freedom of association of people. Specific supply models for
medical uses should be sought, in parallel of a needed for-profit adult use market, without which all other
options risk being overwhelmed by covered up recreational demand
Target 11.4
Strengthen efforts to protect and safeguard the world’s cultural and natural
heritage.
Target 11.a
Support positive economic, social and environmental links between urban,
per-urban and rural areas by strengthening national and regional development
planning.
3- supply 4- rights
(b) (d) (a) (d) (i)
6- cooperation 7- development
(a) (h) (i) (j) (k) (l)
The legal production and distribution of Cannabis provides the opportunity to implement public policies
that promote employment throughout the production and distribution chains at the local level prioritizing
individuals with a past record of non-violent Cannabis-related offences. Promoting integration, inclusion,
drawing on local knowledge and expertise. Regulating existing crops can result in increased income for the
area208, leading to greater regional development.
The late development under prohibition of small-scale Cannabis farmers in countries with the strongest
largest demand, particularly in peri-urban and rural areas, should also be seen as a way to establish
sustainable links between cities and suburban settlements, and could facilitate community empowerment
with practical models of ethnosphere preservation and sustainable agricultural practices, which could include
the production of fiber, seed, and their derivatives.
Incentives for locally-oriented Cannabis markets that empower communities, as described under the previous
Goals, are key for the protection of the cultural and natural heritage of traditional rural Cannabis-producing
regions. Reforming Cannabis policies in tandem with the development of AO or geographical indicators
for Cannabis products have the potential to provide legal support and protection of intellectual property,
which includes elements of both cultural and natural heritage. TK and cultural practices related to Cannabis
cultivation and medicinal preparations and practices would fall under these protections as would genetic
materials (chemovars which have been developed and bred by local communities with unique chemotypic
expressions).
RESPONSIBLE CONSUMPTION AND
PRODUCTION
Ensure sustainable consumption and production patterns.
Target 12.2
By 2030, achieve the sustainable management and efficient use of natural
resources.
The alternative that Cannabis for non psychoactivity-related purposes represents, for paper, plastic, biofuel,
building materials, and clothes, should be taken into consideration while developing strategies to manage and
reduce the use of fossil fuel and other non-renewable resources. Furthermore, the benefit of Cannabis policy
regulation to fight illicit cultivation-led deforestation is yet another element to consider209.
Target 12.3
By 2030, halve per capita global food waste at the retail and consumer levels
and reduce food losses along production and supply chains, including post-
harvest losses.
Target 12.5
By 2030, substantially reduce waste generation through prevention, reduction,
recycling and reuse.
Almost all byproducts and wastes from the Cannabis plant can be reused or recycled, and are
biodegradable210.
Developing countries should be supported by the mechanisms of international cooperation for the professional
Target 12.a
Support developing countries to strengthen their scientific and technological
capacity to move towards more sustainable patterns of consumption and
production.
training of social and health care professionals in order to mainstream evidence-based and honest education to
Cannabis use and related harms, and to orientate people who use Cannabis towards an approach of sustainable
consumption focused on reducing potential harms and empowering informed Cannabis consumer choices211.
If we do not change course by 2020, we risk missing the point where we can avoid runaway climate change,
with disastrous consequences for people and all the natural systems that sustain us” Antonio Guterres, UN
Secretary-General212.
Although there is no specific target of Goal 13 to which Cannabis directly relates, this report refers to that
plant and its policies as an important lever for climate action in the context of Sustainable Development Goals
1, 2, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12, 15 and 17. If the plant fails to fit the SDG Targets, it answers the call to accelerate climate
action for all Goals, and answer the Sustainable Development Agenda’s mandate “to protect the planet from
degradation, including through sustainable consumption and production, sustainably managing its natural
resources and taking urgent action on climate change, so that it can support the needs of the present and
future generations.”213
A working ethnobotanical relationship with Cannabis sativa is necessary to build green and resilient societies.
Many findings presented in this report show that the Cannabis plant and sustainable policy reforms provide a
toolkit to help mitigating climate change, and tackling its effects.
Cannabis and its policies might not be at the core of multilateral action on climate change, yet they are
an influencing factor on multiple climate and climate change outcomes, either positively in the case of
the plant’s potential (e.g., uses of the plant for the numerous non psychoactivity-related purposes, soil
phytoremediation...) or negatively in the case of failed policies (e.g., deforestation caused by illicit crops
driven by DTOs, indoor cultivation...).
Cannabis and its policies might not save the world. Yet they deserve to play a role in transforming our planet
and its inhabitants.
Sustainable Development
Goal 15.
Ecosystems & life on land.
80 Cannabis & Sustainable Development.
While it is unlikely that drug trafficking Cannabis is best planted with a wide range of
organizations include environmental outputs in their other plants, which fosters biodiversity and enhances
strategies, legal standards and regulations must lay flowering Cannabis to become a source of pollen for
the framework for legal farmers to do so. foraging bees. Agricultural policies and programs
should encourage crop diversification not only within
Standards-based regulated geographic indication the genus Cannabis, but also with other crops.
systems and Appellations of Origin support best
practices and environmental protections, market Research and development on the potential
viability of small-scale craft production, rural of Cannabis crops in phytoremediation and
economic development and environmental health, phytoextraction for contaminated land and water
among others. They should be considered a primary should be encouraged.
tool with which to navigate the sustainable and
global expansion of regulated Cannabis crops in rural Specific provisions in international legal
areas. instruments on intellectual property might be
necessary in order to provide effective protection of
Cannabis-related traditional knowledge, traditional
cultural expressions and genetic resources.
Paving the way for the next decade in Cannabis and hemp policies. 81
Target 15.1
By 2020, ensure the conservation, restoration and sustainable use of
terrestrial and inland freshwater ecosystems and their services, in particular
forests, wetlands, mountains and drylands, in line with obligations under
international agreements.
Target 15.4
By 2030, ensure the conservation of mountain ecosystems, including their
biodiversity, in order to enhance their capacity to provide benefits that are
essential for sustainable development.
The necessity for Cannabis growers to hide their crops from the scrutiny of authorities has resulted in a
dispersion (and thus expansion) of illegal cultivation in hidden areas previously preserved from human
footprint. In Morocco, clearing of forests for illegal Cannabis cultivation and cutting for firewood accounted
for almost 90% of the deforestation214. In the USA, significant areas of protected national parks have been
taken over by DTOs to cultivate Cannabis215. According to the Alternative World Drug Report216, in Mexico’s
Sierra Madre Occidental region, “one of the most prolific opium and cannabis producing regions in the world”,
the “displacement of drug producers to this area has fuelled widespread deforestation, jeopardising the 200
species of oak tree and the habitats of numerous rare bird species – such as the thick-billed parrot – found
in the region. Such deforestation is not limited to the area cultivated for illicit crops. Rather, in addition to this
land, drug producers also clear forest for subsistence crops, cattle pastures, housing, transport routes and in
some cases, for airstrips. As a result of this, several acres of forest are often clearcut to produce just one acre
of drug crop.”
Enforcement-led approaches to Cannabis control pretended to minimize the ecological damage that
illegal cultivation causes to the environment. Yet, they have rather “magnified these harms, transferring
environmental costs to ever more remote, ecologically sensitive areas”.
It is indeed unlikely that DTOs would include environmental outputs in their strategies. Only legal rules and
regulations can lay the framework for legal farmers to do so. “Left in the hands of unscrupulous criminals,
drug production will continue to be conducted covertly, leading to the dangerous disposal of chemical waste,
and damage to sensitive and important ecosystems.”217
Standards-based regulated geographic indication systems and AOs support best practices and
environmental protections, market viability of small-scale craft production, rural economic development,
environmental health, community identity, and other regionally stabilizing benefits pertinent to the
Sustainable Development Agenda. Given the widespread establishment of pre-regulatory producing regions
of Cannabis for both psychoactivity and non psychoactivity-related purposes throughout the world, and AOs
should be considered a primary tool with which to navigate the sustainable and global expansion of regulated
Cannabis crops in rural areas.
Cannabis is best planted with diverse other companion plants, which enhances biodiversity. Moreover,
during time periods with a dearth of pollinator-friendly crop plants in the region, flowering “hemp” becomes
a potentially valuable source of pollen for foraging bees218. Agricultural policies and programs should
encourage crop diversification not only within the genus Cannabis, but also with other crops.
Target 15.3
By 2030, combat desertification, restore degraded land and soil, including
land affected by desertification, drought and floods, and strive to achieve a
land degradation-neutral world.
While the area of arable land contaminated by anthropogenic-derived pollutants continually increases, the
potential for the use of Cannabis crops in phytoremediation programs for contaminated land is being under
close scrutiny by the scientific community219 for its potential benefits for trace element phytoextraction
in contaminated soils and water. Studies have focused on the cultivation of Cannabis in heavy metals-
contaminated soils220 for instance for the production of “biodiesel”221. In a study comparing Cannabis with
three other plants, “hemp [...] showed the best phytoextraction potential for [lead]”, and there are some
mentions that Ukraine's Institute of Bast Crops undertook cultivation of Cannabis to remove hazardous
contaminants in soils of the Chernobyl area222.
Target 15.c
Promote fair and equitable sharing of the benefits arising from the utilization
of genetic resources and promote appropriate access to such resources, as
internationally agreed.
Perelmuter (2011) relates that seeds have played a central role in agricultural production, for their role in plant
reproduction and dissemination – and for their important nutrition intake in the case of Cannabis and many
other crops. Historically considered as “common goods”, “peasant and indigenous communities have freely
collected, stored, conserved and exchanged seeds, maintaining a control over them”223 since the emergence of
sedentary agriculture.
Yet the commodification of seeds results in the deprivation of that characteristic of “common good”, to the
detriment of phyto-genetic diversity. “Technical changes in the seeds that facilitate their appropriation” as
well as “transformations in the legal framework of intellectual property that imply a tendency for farmers to
become simple lessees of germplasms”224 are two major threats to fair and equitable sharing of benefits
identified by Perelmuter225.
But Cannabis makes the case for hope. Duvall226 analyzes about South Africa that “actions that social
movements, especially indigenous and peasants, give around continuing to consider seeds as common goods
extends to territories with traditional use of Cannabis” which is key to counter “the overwhelming force of
capital in its attempt to appropriate the seeds.” Civil society responses to these threats227, in the form of seed
banks, plant genetics catalogues and other initiatives, have created the foundation of a strategy to tackle
undue appropriation of Cannabis-related natural resources.
While legally regulated Cannabis cultivation offers communities a way to exit illegal market-related activities,
and provides opportunities for them to develop sustainable standards of cultivation and manufacture, the
mobilization of civil society’s movements will not be sufficient and will need support: Cannabis cultivation
should be harmonized within the existing international legal instruments protection and safeguard
plants genetic resources, and promoting equitable sharing of benefits arising from natural resources –
including the intellectual property protections such as AO or geographical indications for herbal Cannabis,
psychoactivity-related derivatives or “hemp” products mentioned earlier. But specific provisions might
be necessary to protect populations with historicity in the cultivation of that plant, and in that sense the
Intergovernmental Committee on Intellectual Property and Genetic Resources, Traditional Knowledge and
Folklore of the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) should take action to provide effective
protection of TK, traditional cultural expressions and genetic resources related to Cannabis sativa L.
PEACE, JUSTICE AND
STRONG INSTITUTIONS
Promote peaceful and inclusive societies for sustainable development, provide
access to justice for all and build effective, accountable and inclusive institu-
tions at all levels.
Prohibitive Cannabis policies have massively To discourage and discontinue illegal cultivation,
undermined economic, social, cultural, civil, political small-scale farmers must be offered viable
human rights. opportunities in the legal economy. Social integration
in legally regulated markets of people currently
Policies must stop criminalizing people who involved in illicit trafficking in Cannabis products is
use Cannabis products and other drugs, and key.
proportionality must be applied to penal and
administrative sanctions. Failure of mass media to differentiate
between regular adult use and abuse, as well as
Cannabis “supply reduction” has been almost acknowledging the particularities of religious or
exclusively focused on customs, police, or even medical uses, should be addressed.
military operations, fuelling violence among criminal
groups and escalating State brutality. Public space Fear, torture, cruel, inhuman or degrading
and institutions should be demilitarized and public treatments, arbitrary detention, the use of lethal
safety forces must urgently be trained to embed force, and arbitrary executions are all symbols of
Human Rights principles in their daily practice. the failure of governments to address the issues
of illicit drug trafficking while respecting the rule
Multilateral support against corruption and of law. These must cease immediately and instead
impunity. be replaced with a call for legal measures of
investigation, truth, justice and if relevant remedy and
Developing legal market regulations for the reparations.
Cannabis plant and its derivatives is a way to address
the enormous profits of drug trafficking organizations
and their capacity of corruption among politicians,
public institutions and economic stakeholders.
Paving the way for the next decade in Cannabis and hemp policies. 87
Target 16.1
Significantly reduce all forms of violence and related death rates everywhere.
Target 16.4
By 2030, significantly reduce illicit financial and arms flows, strengthen the
recovery and return of stolen assets and combat all forms of organized crime.
Target 17.13
Enhance global macroeconomic stability, including through policy
coordination and policy coherence.
3- supply 4- rights
(a) (b) (d) (e) (g) (i) (j) (k) (l) (m) (o) (p) (q) (r) (s) (t) (a) (d) (f) (i) (k) (l) (o)
Since the adoption of the Single Convention in 1961, and even more vigorously since the 1988 Convention
setting the stage for the "war on drugs", Cannabis “supply reduction” measures have been almost exclusively
focused on law enforcement, customs, police, or even military operations, fuelling DTOs violence228 and
multiplying State violence.
Between 2006 and 2009, Mexico increased its offensive against DTOs in the country229. Federal police forces
tripled and 45,000 military troops joined the “counter-narcotics” offensive230. During this period, violent
deaths increased from around 3,000 in 2007 to more than 15,000 in 2010231. This data does not only relate to
Cannabis, but gives an idea of the impact repressive and law enforcement-focused approaches have had on
violence and violent deaths, particularly in producing and transit countries. “Countries where the drug trade
has been met with a militarized drug policy have often experienced a rise in other crimes, including extortion
and kidnapping, which criminal organizations use as additional sources of income”232.
According to the Organization of American States, “illicit drug production and trafficking may produce what
has been called negative forms of social integration – relationships of loyalty, reciprocity, and a strong sense
of belonging and recognition, but based on crime and violence”233. Therefore, social integration of people
currently involved in illicit trafficking in Cannabis products is key to decreasing levels of violence globally.
Nowadays this violent illegal market – much more controlled by DTOs than by the United Nations drug control
programme – is estimated by UNODC to be worth “US$320- billion as a conservative estimate, accounting for
a minimum of 50% of the value of global illicit financial flows”234. Legal regulation of Cannabis markets that
disrupt DTOs’ high profits might be an efficient way to help reduce their capacity for generating violence and
other social nuisances.
Target 16.3
Promote the rule of law at the national and international levels and ensure
equal access to justice for all.
231 The Guardian, 2011. Access directly the spreadsheet with governmental data at: docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/16W7tm-
mQMPTt7gZI4yTPvMOrOwY-lXw1H9BgxiGUV75g
232 International Peace Institute, 2018; and Werb et al., 2011.
233 OAS, 2013.
234 Health Poverty Action, 2015; see also UNODC, 2011.
Paving the way for the next decade in Cannabis and hemp policies. 89
Criminal justice systems that enforce discriminatory laws235, by nature, undermine fair justice236 systems and
equal rights. Policies on Cannabis and other drugs (often similar) that criminalise people who use drugs and
related activities, “merely [increase] stigma and marginalisation, acting as a barrier to education, employment,
health and social services, and even the right to vote (for example in the United States)"237.
The UNODC recognized negative consequences of current international drug and Cannabis policies238,
among which “the criminalization and marginalization of people who use drugs, often amplified through
the use of the criminal justice system to address drug use and minor possession”. The UNDP precises
that “increasing evidence demonstrates additional harmful effects of drug control policies and related law
enforcement practices on development outcomes, particularly [...] governance and the rule of law”239.
The Organization of American States recognized that “in order to discourage illegal cultivation, small-scale
farmers must have viable opportunities in the legal economy. Young people in search of a sense of belonging
and identity must find hope that they can become contributing members of society. In order for the drug trade
not to become a life choice, all citizens should be able to identify with a culture that values human rights,
dignity, and equal opportunities – a culture that respects and actively promotes the rule of law”241.
The illegality of Cannabis products artificially inflated their prices – and profits for DTOs – and is often used
to finance other illicit activities. Developing market regulations of the Cannabis plant and its derivatives is
a way to address the enormous profits of DTOs and their capacity for corrupting public institutions and
economic agents. Cannabis and broader drug control policy reforms are critical to reducing bribery and
corruption at all levels and developing transparent and accountable institutions and administrations.
Possession laws are not the only way that legal systems violate human rights and contribute to the violence
that accompanies the “War on Drugs”242. There are judicial systems in which guilt is assumed for any type
of possession (e.g., Singapore, Malaysia, France). In some legal systems, authorities are empowered to
detain suspected traffickers for sixty days without even a guarantee of appearing before a court243. In many
countries, the high number of Cannabis and drug-related offences led to establishing systems of immediate
235 Among others, international human rights legal instruments protecting against discrimination include: the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights of 1948 (Articles 2 and 7), the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights of 1966 (Articles 2 (1) and 26), the Inter-
national Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights of 1966 (Articles 2(2) and 3), the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination Against Women of 1979 (Article 2) and the Convention on the Rights of the Child of 1989 (Article 2).
236 UNDP 2015. See also Goal 10.
237 GCDP, 2018.
238 UNODC, 2008.
239 UNDP, 2015 p. 12.
240 OAS, 2013.
241 ibid.
242 Deane, 2018.
243 Transform Drug Policy Foundation, 2015.
90 Cannabis & Sustainable Development.
summons and other sorts of expeditive and summary trials244 that clearly undermine the right to defense245
and has a disproportionate impact on foreigners246.
It has been recognized that many drug-control laws, and their enforcement policies easily deviate to forms of
torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatments247, arbitrary detention248 and even sometimes the use of
lethal force, and arbitrary executions249. In China for instance, the death penalty is applied routinely in an effort
to stop drug trafficking250. The laws that sustain the absurd “War on Drugs” are a paradigmatic example of
Human Rights violations throughout all levels of the police and justice systems.
Failure of mass media to differentiate between regular adult use (“recreational consumption”) and
problematic use (“abuse”) in certain cultures has played an important role in the criminalization of the use
of Cannabis – which can amount to not only human, but also civil, political and cultural rights violations for
some populations251.
In certain religions and rites, so-called “entheogenic plants”252 are fundamental and have been used
traditionally for centuries for religious purposes253. The 1961 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs binded
ratifying countries to eliminate traditional religious uses of Cannabis within a period of twenty-five years. Yet,
this measure clearly contradicts international law254 on the protection of traditional religious practices, and the
rights of indigenous people255.
In Mexico, complaints to Human Rights agencies for abuses perpetrated by military and police forces have
increased about 900% since the 1980s. Mass massacres happen, not only by the hand of DTOs, but also
by that of police or military forces in cases related to drug trafficking256. Systematic State-led violences are
endemic in transit regions257.
Target 16.5
Substantially reduce corruption and bribery in all their forms.
Target 16.6
Develop effective, accountable and transparent institutions at all levels.
The enormous profits258 and absence of taxation of DTOs has allowed them to easily and systematically “pay
off judges, police, politicians, and other officials using their vast drug profits” as in Mexico259. “DTOs created a
network of corruption that ensured distribution rights, market access, and even official government protection
for drug traffickers in exchange for lucrative bribes.” Operations of infiltration and monitoring of DTOs are
important point of contact with small and medium-level law enforcement and military officers, who are also a
central target of DTOs corruption, aside Government officials260.
One of the most obvious evidence of DTO-governments associations is the lack of prosecutions (or non-
meaningful prosecutions) of high-ranking government officials corrupted by DTOs, something that is
Corruption-related money and asset laundering activities go through tax-havens or international financial
centres. In this regard, the case of HSBC is significative, and highlights the structural ritualisation and
normalisation of corrupt and unethical behaviour in relation with criminal organizations and corrupted
governance, within the banking environment270. Efforts to make banking and finance more transparent should
be strengthened to tackle the core of the financial flows and laundering of the money of corruption.
In addition to its inherent damages and destabilization of societies, the corruption generated by the illegal
Cannabis and controlled drugs markets escalated violence between DTOs and public institutions leading to
a degeneration of State security forces into similarly violent practices than those of DTOs. Worse, the legal
industrial military complex took part to this escalation (e.g., the case of the Fast & Furious operation271 the
German company Heckler & Koch and its sale of assault weapons that were used in massacre by police and
military forces of 43 students from the Mexican village of Ayotzinapa272).
social sciences that seek to make visible the complexity of modern criminal organizations, corruption, politics
and their relation to power, once certain unprecedented levels of violence and constraint has been reached.
The “abandonment of important social sectors, the impoverishment, the corruption and the inability of
governments to provide security, have generated enormous spaces of para-legality”277. The extreme
hierarchization of DTOs’ work structures, resulting from prohibition-induced lack of regulation in business
practices, has resulted in a modification of social perceptions278, and ultimately in profound economic, socio-
political and symbolic power disparities in the regions most affected by harsh repressive prohibition policies 279.
DTOs criminal activity also play an important role in generating social contexts that benefit narcopolitical or
necropolitical strategies: on the one hand, they represent a considerable part of most countries’ GDP, on the
other hand the fear instilled among civilian population can benefit authorities relying on the effectiveness of
that fear to table controversial laws undertake special extrajudicial operations or declare the state of exception/
emergency (e.g., Mexico, Philippines, Brazil)280. The indirect contextual support that DTOs provide to corrupt
governments allow to justify policies of exceptionality and increased Human Rights violations, as well as the
normalization of invasive authoritarian and surveillance measures281.
The most infamous examples are in Asia (Philippines: more than 20,000 government-motivated extrajudicial
killings of people alleged to be related to drugs – including Cannabis282 – were reported during the last three
years283; Bangladesh: almost 500 alleged extrajudicial murders, motivated by the government, in a six months
period284), and in Latin America (Mexico: about 35,000 people were reported to be killed in relation with illicit
drug trade, in four years285).
Techniques of extreme violence (e.g. kidnapping, sale of human organs, torture, murder on demand, sexual
violences, etc.) echoed by similarly violent, disproportionate, dignity-violating law enforcement interventions,
legitimate the terminology of narco- and necropolitics286. However, because of the economic strength and
social implantation of DTOs, planning effective strategies to fight against them might bring as a consequence
“recessive effects in the economy as a whole and significant social consequences"287. This might explain
why neither governants nor military and security forces seek to put an end to the power of these criminal
organizations: they rather prefer to limit DTO’s power, and eventually use it to their advantage.
There seem to be only one way to curve violence and severe breach to the rule of law, while preserving the
economical development of affected countries: legal regulations of the Cannabis market and, when relevant
and as appropriate, of other controlled plants, products and substances. Besides this need to reform criminal
2004.
277 Castro & Moreno, 2015, p. 86.
278 Arcila Estrada, 2017.
279 Sandoval, 2004, p. 81.
280 Agamben, 2003.
281 Dunn, 2001; and Vagle, 2016.
282 See for instance Balagtas See, 2017; and Gavilan, 2018.
283 Human Rights Watch, 2017; Asian Network of People who Use Drugs, 2019,
284 According to ANPUD (Asian Network of People who Use Drugs, 2019), “Over 27,000 people killed in drug crackdowns in the Philippines
since May 2016. In Bangladesh, up to 466 people have been killed since the Prime Minister launched a nationwide anti-drugs campaign in
May 2018.”
285 The Guardian, 2011.
286 Andreatta, s.d.
287 Resa Nestares, 2003.
94 Cannabis & Sustainable Development.
justice systems288 and provide safe and legal ways for populations to get involved in alternative licit trade,
the creation of international “truth and justice” commissions to independently investigate and combat
impunity and crime should be sought to contribute to a post-prohibition process that enforces the right to
remedy and reparation for victims of gross Human Rights violations and strengthens transparency and the
rule of law.
Target 16.10
Ensure public access to information and protect fundamental freedoms, in
accordance with national legislation and international agreements.
Target 17.6
Enhance North-South, South-South and triangular regional and international
cooperation on and access to science, technology and innovation and
enhance knowledge sharing on mutually agreed terms, including through
improved coordination among existing mechanisms, in particular at the
United Nations level, and through a global technology facilitation mechanism.
Target 17.16
Enhance the global partnership for sustainable development, complemented
by multi-stakeholder partnerships that mobilize and share knowledge,
expertise, technology and financial resources, to support the achievement of
the sustainable development goals in all countries, in particular developing
countries.
4- rights 5- trends
OPERATIVE PARAGRAPH 9
(a) (b)
During the period of 1954-2019289, the WHO’s official position was that “there should be an [...] abolition
of cannabis from all legitimate medical practice”290, fundamentally unbiased research related to Cannabis
has been scarce. The new policy landscape with recognition from the WHO and an increasing number of
jurisdictions allowing medical use has created an unprecedented opportunity for multi-disciplinary research
and is facilitating a renewal of Cannabis and cannabinoid studies. After updating its position the WHO has a
mandate to lead and coordinate cooperation on science and knowledge-sharing related to Cannabis to ensure
access to information for all.
In some countries like France291, freedom of speech on topics related to drugs is restricted. This constitutes
an undeniable barrier to drug-related education, prevention and information for people who use Cannabis as
well as social and health workers who cannot work adequately when lacking this information.
Elsewhere, public funds for research have been geared towards studies that focus on the adverse effects
or possible negative outcomes of drug and Cannabis use. Research that entailed benefits or non-alarming
outcomes were discouraged or unfunded resulting in very few studies of that nature undermining the Right of
everyone to share in scientific advancement and its benefits292, and the Right to enjoy the benefits of scientific
progress and its applications293.
291 Article L3421-4 of the French Public Health Code states that the “favorable presentation” of the use of controlled drugs is punishable
by five years imprisonment and a €75,000 fine.
292 UNGA, 1948, Article 27; UNGA, 1969, Article 13; and HRC, 2012.
293 UNGA, 1966, Article 15.
PARTNERSHIPS FOR THE GOALS
Strengthen the means of implementation and revitalize the global partnership
for sustainable development.
Coherence and consistency of global and national To cohere, policies should stop hampering human
policies and strategies is needed. Rather than rights and overlapping the mandate of ensuring
maintaining drug policies in a parallel universe with a access and availability of controlled plants, products,
new post-2019 international plan of action on drugs, or substances for medical and research purposes.
the UN Commission on Narcotic Drugs should design
drug-control strategies articulated around the Goals Affected populations, peer groups, NGOs,
of the Sustainable Development Agenda. scholars, the health and social care sector as well as
the private sector should be involved at all levels of
Redirecting part of international and domestic decision, in particular in the early design of Cannabis-
government funding of drug control law enforcement related strategies, policies, laws, and regulations.
towards health and development policies can provide
a significant contribution to achieving the Goals of
the 2030 Agenda.
Target 17.3
Enhance North-South, South-South and triangular regional and international
cooperation on and access to science, technology and innovation and
enhance knowledge sharing on mutually agreed terms, including through
improved coordination among existing mechanisms, in particular at the
United Nations level, and through a global technology facilitation mechanism.
Target 17.11
Enhance the global partnership for sustainable development, complemented
by multi-stakeholder partnerships that mobilize and share knowledge,
expertise, technology and financial resources, to support the achievement of
the sustainable development goals in all countries, in particular developing
countries.
6- rights 7- cooperation
(a) (e) (c) (i) (l)
Enforcing anti-drug policies costs at least US$100- billion a year globally, rivaling the US$130- billion global
aid budget”294. Given this extensive gap in funding needed to achieve the SDG targets295, “diverting a proportion
of international and domestic government funding currently reserved for drug law enforcement towards
development could provide a significant contribution to achieving the SDGs. Any reallocation of funding would
also have a double-positive effect on achieving the SDGs, by reducing funding for drug policies which are
counter-productive to meeting the Goals."296
In complement (as discussed under Goal 16.4 and target 17.13) sound reforms of Cannabis policies would
lead to a redistribution of profits and a mobilization of DTO’s resources towards public policy action for
sustainable development. The transition of crops from illegal to legal settings, diversification of Cannabis
plant-derived products, reuse of waste, as well as suggested tools such as geographical and origin protections
are ways to create added value and additional financial resources (leading to increasing legal exports of
Cannabis-related products) from some of the least developed and most peripheral countries.
Target 17.14
Enhance policy coherence for sustainable development.
2- availability 3- supply
(e) (q)
4- rights 6- cooperation
OPERATIVE PARAGRAPH 9
(a) (i) (a) (d)
The effect of the international drug control system has always been in stark contradiction to basic Human
Rights standards. But since the decade of the 1990’s297 the international community has set a series of
targets that are not only in contradiction with many other treaties, agreements and national policies298 but also
contradict some provisions of the drug control Treaties. International policies and strategies on drugs have
overlapped the goal of ensuring access and availability of controlled plants, products, or substances for
medical and research purposes.
Drug-related topics, Cannabis in particular, are victims of incoherences and inconsistencies in international
policies and strategies. Rather than creating a new international plan of action on drugs (and maintaining
drug policies in a parallel universe compared to United Nations values, missions, strategies, and programme
of work), the UN Commission on Narcotic Drugs should design drug-control strategies in alignment with the
Goals of the Sustainable Development Agenda as a plan of action. Similar steps could be taken at the local,
national, and regional level, thus meeting the commitment made by the UN to ensure that all future policies
are aligned with the Sustainable Development framework299.
Target 17.17
Encourage and promote effective public, public-private and civil society
partnerships, building on the experience and resourcing strategies of
partnerships.
1- demand 4- rights
(e) (q) (a) (b) (h) (i)
6- cooperation 7- development
OPERATIVE PARAGRAPH 9
(d) (g) (i) (l)
The political abandonment of populations affected by prohibition has helped gather some affected persons
and peer groups and some have created policy model proposals such as the Cannabis social clubs300 that
seek consensus with authorities to establish a small-scale non-for-profit psychoactive Cannabis products
retail system in order to secure their right to privacy. They have successfully been incorporated into public
policies (e.g. Uruguay and at the local level in Spain301) demonstrating an efficient result-oriented integration
of grassroots initiatives into public policy.
Involvement of peers and people who use drug in prevention and education campaigns at all stages, is also a
key element of the needed government-citizen collaborations to be sought.
Civil society (including affected populations, peer groups, non-governmental organizations, scholars, health
and social care sector as well as the private sector, etc.) should be involved at all levels of decision – in
particular in the early design of Cannabis-related strategies, policies, laws, and regulations.
300 Decorte, 2016; ENCOD, 2011; Ghehioueche and Riboulet-Zemouli, 2016; Jansseune et al., 2019; Marks, 2019; and Pardal et al, 2018.
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