Psychedelic eMagazine ISSUE #5 | Page 10

10 ARTICLE HEMP High and Dry: Can Cannabis Solve the Omnivore’s Dilemma in Times of Drought? Article by: Jeremy Daw -The 2014 harvest, according to my sources in California’s Emerald Triangle, promises to be a bumper crop — if there is any harvest at all. While production has swelled, both in plant count and size, the sheer magnitude of the cannabis harvest appears poised to worsen what was already a potentially existential threat: California’s recordbreaking drought. Trees of this size, according to Chris Van Hook, author of the Clean Green Certified standard for environmentally responsible cannabis cultivation, can each require up to 15 gallons of water every day. Van Hook, who conducted the first real-world study of water consumption on Emerald Triangle cannabis farms, estimated that the late-season water draw of all cannabis farms in Mendocino County is close to 32 million gallons — daily. As one who prefers sun-grown cannabis to indoor primarily on the basis of its lighter carbon footprint, the revelation that outdoor-produced pot can exacerbate an already distressing drought provoked a cognitive dissonance in me not unlike that of the omnivore’s dilemma, in which journalist Michael Pollan becomes temporarily paralyzed by the realization that his food choices have massive environmental impacts — seemingly no matter what he chooses to eat for dinner. The dissonance was resolved for me, perhaps unsurprisingly, by Ed Rosenthal. As we passed an Ed Rosenthal back and forth around his veranda coffee table, I brought up the water issue which had been bothering me. “It’s a problem, especially in Northern California,” Ed acknowledged. “But after legalization, when outdoor farmers will be able to grow in the Central Valley, the effect will be relatively minimal.” 11 I was skeptical. 32 million gallons per day sounded like an awful lot of water for just one county. But Ed directed me to look at the state’s official statistics on water use, which reveal that California agriculture diverts a mind-boggling 34 million acre-feet of water per year — or about 30 billion gallons every day. He had a point — as massive as the water drain of Mendocino cannabis seemed to be, it was a mere drop in the bucket compared to the Central Valley’s irrigation agriculture. “When it comes to wasteful water use,” Ed said while puffing at the Ed, “you should really look at almonds.” He’s right, of course. California almonds, by comparison to cannabis, use up to 3 billion of those 30 billion daily gallons flooding the Central Valley. Almond “milk,” as Ed pointed out, was even worse — after all of that water poured into the thirsty ground to get the almonds, food processors then dissolve the machine-masticated nuts into even more water, which is then shipped to Whole Foods to cream the coffees of vegan consumers. This is where I bristled. While I don’t adopt the label ‘vegan’ (when it comes to cheese I, l ike Oscar Wilde, can resist anything except temptation), I had still decided to change the milk in my daily coffee, based partly on the fact that dairy products require much more water than plant-based crops. Suddenly my switch to almond milk, made in a mood of such self-righteousness, brought the cognitive dissonance right back. So that’s why if you happen across me at my morning coffee these days, you’ll smell the nutty wafting of hemp milk. Among the crop’s many environmental benefits, hemp requires significantly less water than most of its competitors; in fact, in many climates, the water requirement of a typical hemp crop is less than the average rainfall, so hempseed production doesn’t necessarily have to affect water reserves at all. Even in the relatively dry Central Valley, its average seasonal water requirements of 500-700 millimeters will hardly break the water bank. That is not to say my fears have all been allayed; the state of Mendocino watersheds is still close to disastrous. But ever since I asked Ed, I’ve become more confident that the problem of the water footprint of my cannabis is just one more issue that legalization can nip right in the bud.