Pubdate: Thu, 01 Oct 2009
Source: Lethbridge Herald (CN AB)
Copyright: 2009 The Lethbridge Herald
Contact:  http://www.lethbridgeherald.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/239
Author: Sherri Gallant

WHERE THE POPPIES GROW?

Southern Alberta will soon become the first place in North America to 
grow a medicinal poppy crop, adding greatly to diversification 
opportunities for area farmers.

The new crop has been yielding between $3,000 and $6,000 a hectare, 
compared with $800 for wheat, and large-scale farming could possibly 
even create more than 200 jobs, at a processing plant eyed for 
development in a couple of years.

Glen Metzler, of Metzler Trading Co. and API Labs, has been waiting 
for two years to get federal approval to sow the first test crop, and 
believes regulatory hurdles have all been cleared and a licence will 
be forthcoming.

"We've supplied the Office of Controlled Substances with all the 
information they've requested. We've met with Minister Ritz, we've 
had meetings with health - as far as we know, everything is a go.

There isn't anything negative that's come back out of government, 
we're just waiting for them to finish the bureaucratic process and 
actually get us our licence.

"We've got research-backed trials ready to go next spring, and we've 
had our licence in front of them now for two and a half years," Metzler said.

"So we're hoping we have everything approved and our licence in place 
by January or February so that we can get our trials on the ground 
and actually get this thing going."

The first licence allows for a small test crop - one or two hectares 
- - to be planted next spring and tested after fall harvest for the 
alkaloid content, amount of seed (seed is a potential biodiesel 
crop), fatty acid profiles and other advantages that may come from 
growing in southern Alberta's climate.

"Taber has the sweetest corn in North America, and it's because of 
our hot days and cold nights. Well there are scientists who believe 
that because of that we could end up with higher alkaloid content 
here in southern Alberta than they're getting in Australia or France 
or the U.K."

Guarding the plants won't be necessary, since even if the flowers 
were to be stolen, turning them into narcotics would be too Herculean a task.

"We've done threat assessments on the plants and there's nothing we 
can see that would be a problem," Metzler said. "It's a thebaine 
poppy. Thebaine is a non-narcotic alkaloid and it can't be converted 
to street drugs. Even if you were to convert it to a pain medication, 
it's not economically feasible. You'd need a $40-million facility and 
we say three PhDs - that kind of expertise - so there's no way you'd 
be able to do it."

Metzler's had discussions with the Tasmanian police in Australia, 
where poppies have been grown for 40 years, both the thebaine and 
morphine varieties, and have never had diversion issues. Other 
countries, including the U.K. and France, have reported the same experience.

"It's no different than hemp," he said. "It's the perception that 
somehow you can get high from smoking hemp, and you can't. And there 
will still be some people who are going to go and try it, and they're 
going to find out that there's nothing there, and then that will be 
the end of it. There's nothing you can do about that, and I don't 
think the government's too worried about that."

Financial support has been received from area farmers and industrial 
partners as well.

"We're poised to go," he said. "We're excited about it. 
"(Agriculture)MinisterGary Ritz is behind it, Rick Casson has done a 
ton of work for us. I don't think there are any problems, it's just 
that every time you go to the government with something new, it takes 
them some time to figure out what to do. So we're being patient and 
optimistic."

Canada imports approximately $1.2 billion a year in products derived 
from poppies. The thebaine poppy can be used in the making of 
percocet, buprenophine, oxycodone, naloxone and others. Growing the 
flowers locally could generate more than $100 million a year.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart