Maybe.
By Colleen Cronin / ecoRI News staff
Although the hemp plant looks and smells like cannabis, it can be legally grown outside, unlike marijuana. (Colleen Cronin/ecoRI News) |
As Rhode Island regulators begin to put into practice the state’s new recreational marijuana law, they’ll have plenty of logistics to figure out, including whether to let licensed cultivators grow their crops outside.
While indoor cannabis
facilities will likely remain a large part of the industry in the Ocean State
because of Rhode Island’s climate and federal regulations, outdoor cultivation
could be a more energy efficient (and less expensive) alternative to current
practices.
Although Rhode
Islanders cultivating cannabis for themselves can already grow the plants
outdoors, right next to their hydrangeas, under the current medical marijuana regulations, licensed
commercial cultivators must grow pot indoors, for both security and
overproduction reasons.
The prohibition on
outdoor commercial growth will remain in place until the state Cannabis Control
Commission creates full adult-use regulations, according to Matthew Santacroce,
chief of the state’s Office of Cannabis Regulation.
Allowing cannabis to
be grown outdoors could dramatically reduce the amount of energy used for
marijuana production. According to a 2021 study, switching from indoor
to outdoor growing could lower a cultivator’s emissions by at least 80%. And
that estimate is conservative, according to one of the study’s authors,
Colorado State University associate professor Jason Quinn.
The study found that
artificial light and climate control systems in indoor growing facilities,
along with the common practice of pumping extra carbon dioxide into the plants’
growing environment to increase photosynthesis, all increase indoor growers’
carbon footprints.
“Plants are not very
efficient at the conversion of solar energy into biomass, but we don’t
typically care about that, because the sun is free, right? So that inefficiency
doesn’t really matter,” Quinn said. But when the cannabis plants at an indoor
cultivation facility depend on tons of man-made light because of that
inefficiency, it increases a facility’s carbon emissions and electricity bill.
The indoor growing
process also necessitates heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems to
maintain proper growing conditions. The facilities that the study looked at
were doing a high number of air exchanges, pumping air in and out of a facility
“upwards of 60 times per hour,” Quinn said.
A typical HVAC system
does 30 air exchanges an hour, he said, but the indoor cannabis growers’
systems were operating like a hospital’s.
That takes a lot of
energy and increases carbon emissions, he said, even more in a place like Rhode
Island, where temperatures swing from very high to very low.
On top of these two factors, many cultivators also artificially increase the concentration of carbon dioxide in the growing environment because it encourages more frequent photosynthesis in the plants and then more growth.
Quinn said the added
CO2 does not contribute to the facility’s carbon footprint, it
counts toward the original waste source, which is usually an ethanol facility.
Instead, the energy that is used to capture, transport, and apply the carbon
dioxide to the growing environment counts toward the marijuana grower’s carbon
emissions.
These environmental
costs also translate to financial burdens. Mike Simpson, one of the
owners Lovewell Farms, an organic hemp farm and CBD
producer in Hopkinton, said that even though he and his business partners would
like to enter the THC business, the cost of moving growing inside would be too
burdensome.
The price of creating
and keeping an indoor facility prevents smaller producers from entering the
market, he said.
Despite the
environmental and fiscal costs of indoor growing, it is likely that pot grown
indoors will still need to supplement bud cultivated outside, even if outdoor
growing is legalized, according to Jared Moffat, who worked on the campaign to
make weed legal in Rhode Island and is the state campaigns manager for
the Marijuana
Policy Project.
Rhode Island’s extreme
weather would restrict when cultivators can grow and harvest their crop
outside, and because marijuana is still illegal federally and can’t be
transported across state lines, all of Rhode Island’s cannabis must be grown
locally, he said.
Growing the plants
outdoors can also be harder to manage, both from a security and quality control
standpoint.
Cannabis has
been stolen from outdoor facilities, but there are
examples of outdoor growing in other states, including
Massachusetts, where greenhouses and outdoor facilities are required
to have “sufficient security measures” and “perimeter security fencing designed
to prevent unauthorized entry.”
The quality of outdoor cannabis flower is also a
hotly debated. Cannabis grown outdoors in the United States often ends up in
oils rather than used as smokable products, Moffat said.
Moffat said a solution
might be a hybrid form of growing or the utilization of greenhouses to reduce
emissions while also maintaining supply, ensuring quality, and keeping local
producers that have already been growing for the medical industry in business.
State Rep. Scott A.
Slater, a Democrat who represents District 10 in Providence who sponsored Rhode Island’s new recreational marijuana law,
said that at least initially, he thinks only indoor growing will be allowed
because of security issues and concerns about overproduction.
Slater said during the
legislative process, most of the push for outdoor growing he heard was coming
from large growers who plant hemp, which is legally allowed to be grown
outside.
“I guess the hemp
market’s kind of dried up and there’s so many people doing hemp that they find
themselves with this business plan that they had,” he said, and with expensive
equipment on their hands for a product that didn’t take off as expected that
could also be used for marijuana plants.
“Now, they want to
jump into the THC market,” Slater said. “With the size of their grow, they
probably would have wiped out a lot of what the cultivators have been working
on.”
Despite those
concerns, Slater said that he thinks the issue should be revisited if towns
support it, demand is there, and sustainability is at the forefront of the
push. Issues like this are why the Cannabis Control Commission was established,
he added.
“It’s an important
issue, sustainability,” he said, “and I would be open to looking at it.”
Colleen Cronin is a
Report for America corps member who writes about environmental issues in rural
Rhode Island for ecoRI News.