The War on Scottish Hemp

Filed Under: Agriculture Held Hostage
A Pot Culture Magazine feature image titled “The War on Scottish Hemp.” The headline appears in bold yellow and white text over a photograph of a farmer’s hands inspecting a tall hemp plant in a lush green field. The Scottish Highlands and a cloudy evening sky form the background. Branding along the bottom reads “PotCultureMagazine.com | ©2025PotCultureMagazine/ArtDept.

In the Scottish Highlands, a cold wind cuts across a field that should be green with hemp. It’s empty now, just soggy soil and memory. Generations ago, Scotland’s land thrived with hemp crops destined for rope, sails, and seed. In fact, hemp grew on Scottish soil for millennia, predating even the earliest clans. But today, a Scottish farmer looking to plant hemp faces more red tape and suspicion than someone opening a whisky distillery. Hemp was a hero crop of Scotland’s past, and if some scrappy farmers have their way, it will be again.

Right now, if a Scottish farmer wants to grow hemp, they need a license from the UK Home Office. You read that right: to grow a plant that won’t get anyone high, our farmers have to beg permission as if they’re making moonshine. And even if they get that coveted license (which costs money and time), it comes with a ridiculous catch.

By law, UK hemp growers must cut down and compost the plant’s leaves and flowers. These are the parts containing the CBD oil, the strongest fibre, and most of the crop’s profit potential. Yet farmers have to trash them because of microscopic traces of THC. It’s so absurd you’d think it’s a bad joke: imagine telling a brewer to pour out his beer because it has alcohol.

Meanwhile, British shops legally sell CBD oils and hemp products imported from places like Denmark and the United States. The government is perfectly fine with someone else growing and processing hemp, just not our own growers. The hypocrisy is enough to make a Highland crofter cuss into his porridge.

So how did we get here? The story is one of old drug laws and power struggles between Edinburgh and London. Under the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971, cannabis is a controlled substance, and that law doesn’t meaningfully distinguish low-THC industrial hemp from its high-THC cousin. Drug policy is a reserved matter under the Scotland Act 1998, meaning Westminster holds the reins, not the Scottish Parliament. Agriculture might be devolved, but when it comes to hemp, Holyrood’s hands are tied by Westminster’s paranoia.

Even so, the Scottish Government is trying to show it’s eager. In October, its agriculture team and the ClimateXChange network hosted a conference to “explore opportunities” for hemp. They had researchers talking up hempcrete insulation and farmers extolling hemp’s role in cutting carbon. It was all very optimistic, yet everyone knew that unless Westminster loosens the leash, it’s mostly hot air.


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Reefer Report Card Vol. 28: The Rescheduling That Wasn’t

This week’s Reefer Report Card cuts through the hype around cannabis “rescheduling,” exposing how a label change left federal prohibition fully intact. Arrest authority, workplace punishment, and immigration penalties remain untouched. Headlines claimed progress. Reality delivered none. A week defined by performance over policy, and reform that never arrived.

THE SCHEDULE III SCAM

Federal officials claim cannabis is moving forward, but Schedule III changes nothing that matters. This investigation breaks down what rescheduling actually does, what it deliberately avoids, and why prohibition logic remains intact. Arrests continue. Markets remain conflicted. Reform language replaces reform action. The system shifts labels while preserving control.

LEGAL WEED, OLD RULES

Legalization promised freedom but preserved prohibition logic. This investigation examines how cannabis reform left arrests, racial disparities, job punishment, medical blame, and equity barriers intact. By tracing enforcement, employment law, healthcare practice, and licensing rules, it shows how legalization changed the label without dismantling the system.


Ronnie Cowan, an SNP MP for Inverclyde, pressed a Home Office minister in 2023 on why hemp cultivation is still treated like a crime. He even suggested giving hemp oversight to DEFRA instead of leaving it under narcotics control. The minister promised a “light-touch” approach. For Scottish farmers, that’s about as comforting as a half measure of whisky on a cold night.

In 2022, eight Scottish farmers produced the nation’s first batch of cold-pressed hemp oil, part of the Scottish Hemp Growers Association. Amber oil flowed from a repurposed press at a feed mill near Oldmeldrum.

Ali Easson, a pioneer farmer, launched Hemp It Up in Angus, selling cold-pressed hemp oil, hemp protein powder, and soaps. Her launch was grassroots entrepreneurship against a backdrop of regulatory nonsense.

The University of Aberdeen Rowett Institute has been studying hemp’s nutritional value and how the crop performs in Scotland. They found that hemp absorbs carbon dioxide, improves soil health, and yields seeds packed with protein. Professor Wendy Russell called it “ideally placed to boost protein and fibre intake.”

That research informed the 2024 Scottish Hemp Opportunities Report, which outlines short- and long-term strategies: carbon credits, processing infrastructure, and potentially devolving hemp oversight. The blueprint is on the table.

The British Hemp Alliance, a national advocacy group, is pushing for policy change, joined by the National Farmers Union. NFU crops chair Jamie Burrows said hemp offers “huge potential for British arable farmers.”

Scotland’s growers face a classic chicken-and-egg problem. No mills, no processing. No processing, no industry. Everyone’s waiting for someone else to jump first. The investment risk is too high without government backing.

France cultivates nearly 20,000 hectares of hemp. The United States legalized hemp federally in 2018. China exports massive quantities. Lithuania grows thousands of hectares.

In Denmark, Endoca has built a vertically integrated CBD brand from seed to shelf. They began with Danish hemp fields and turned into a global name. Proof that with smart regulation, hemp can thrive.

In 2022, the UK cultivated about 800 hectares of hemp. An industry-backed initiative dubbed “Hemp-30” aims to expand this to 80,000 hectares by 2031. On paper, it sounds great. In practice, the laws haven’t caught up.

If you want to help, support the Scottish Hemp Association and British Hemp Alliance. Write your MSPs and MPs and ask why Scottish farmers are banned from capitalizing on a carbon-sequestering, protein-rich, zero-high crop. Tell them the current system is unsustainable, irrational, and unfit for a green economy.

Scotland’s farmers are ready to sow. All they need now is permission.


©2025 POT CULTURE MAGAZINE


F O R T H E C U L T U R E B Y T H E C U L T U R E

THE PRODUCT THEY NEVER TEST

Hospitals increasingly diagnose Cannabinoid Hyperemesis Syndrome without testing the cannabis products involved. This investigation examines how cartridges, edibles, and other cannabis materials are excluded from medical evaluation, despite known contamination risks, leaving patients with diagnoses based on symptoms and self reported use rather than verified evidence.

THE CON OF CANNABIS REFORM

Cannabis rescheduling keeps resurfacing in headlines, then vanishing without action. This feature breaks down how federal officials repeatedly float reform language, let deadlines pass, and leave the law untouched. By tracing the mechanics behind the stall, the piece exposes why delay is intentional, who benefits from it, and why cannabis reform remains trapped in federal…

Ohio Tightens Screws On Legal Weed

Ohio voters approved legalization, but lawmakers followed with Senate Bill 56, a measure that tightens control through enforcement expansion, licensing caps, and market restrictions. This piece breaks down what the law actually changes, who benefits from the new structure, and how state authority grows while legal access narrows after the vote.



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