$1M Grant Funds Study on Greener, Cleaner Cannabis Farming

 Cannabis Studies Instructor Dan Mar and students visit a local watershed as part of the Cannabis Studies program's cannabis and regenerative agriculture course.

Cannabis Studies Instructor Dan Mar and students visit a local watershed as part of the Cannabis Studies program’s cannabis and regenerative agriculture course. Photo courtesy of Cal Poly Humboldt.

Press release from Cal Poly Humboldt:

A $1 million grant from the Campbell Foundation is funding a first-of-its-kind study aimed at helping cannabis farmers reduce costs, lower environmental impacts, and produce cleaner, more sustainable products.

Over the next two years, researchers from Cal Poly Humboldt and Chico State will partner with farmers in six California counties—Humboldt, Trinity, Mendocino, Sonoma, Nevada, and Santa Cruz—to study regenerative agricultural practices. These approaches focus on improving soil health and biodiversity through techniques such as cover cropping, increasing soil organic matter to retain water, and attracting beneficial insects for natural pest control.

The research will determine how much these practices reduce the need for water, fertilizers, and pesticides—potentially lowering costs for farmers while improving environmental outcomes, explains Dan Mar, lead researcher and faculty member in the Cannabis Studies program at Cal Poly Humboldt.

“Many farming practices are described as sustainable or regenerative. But there’s still limited scientific data about them in cannabis cultivation,” Mar says. “This project will help us understand what works, from water and nutrient use to soil health, and what those practices mean for farmers economically.”

“Ultimately, ecological practices can also be economical,” Mar says. “By showing which methods are good for the land and the bottom line, this project could help build a more sustainable cannabis industry—benefiting farmers, consumers, and local ecosystems.”

For consumers, the research may provide greater transparency and higher-quality products. Mar also hopes the data will inform future policies and create more equitable conditions for cannabis farmers.

One of the project’s main goals is to create a Cannabis Farm Assessment Protocol—a tool developed in collaboration with farmers to evaluate their practices and help other farmers adopt more sustainable ones.

“We are excited to learn from the hard-earned experiences and knowledge these farmers have while working together to build a path forward that not only makes their operations more holistic, but also demonstrates the role of stewardship as a foundation of sustainable farms and local communities,” says Soil Science Professor Garrett C. Liles, co-founder of the Center for Regenerative Agriculture & Resilient Systems at Chico State and researcher on the project.

The study will also explore the historical and cultural dimensions of cannabis farming in Northern California by documenting farmers’ knowledge and experiences in a region long associated with the crop.

“This is all about collaboration,” says William Nitzky, Anthropology professor at Chico State and one of the study’s researchers. “What makes this project unique is that we are conducting interdisciplinary work across agriculture, the natural sciences, and the social sciences, together with farmers.”

“By documenting their experience and knowledge about the region, growing strategies and systems, risks and challenges, and innovations, we’re preserving an important cultural story about how this industry developed and continues to evolve,” says Nitzky. “Bringing together farmer knowledge and scientific research can help shape a more equitable and sustainable future for the cannabis industry in California and beyond.”

 

About the Campbell Foundation

Driven by the philosophy that collaboration enables change, The Campbell Foundation supports organizations in their work to create more equitable and livable communities. Established by Keith Campbell in 1998 to improve the conditions of the Chesapeake and Atlantic Coastal Bays, its focus expanded in 2003 to include issues impacting California’s watershed regions. Today, under the leadership of Foundation president and Keith’s daughter, Samantha Campbell, The Campbell Foundation offers a broad range of grants, including unsolicited, multi-year, general support, and capacity building.

About Cal Poly Humboldt

Located in Northern California, Cal Poly Humboldt is a leader in cannabis education and research, offering the nation’s first bachelor’s degree in Cannabis Studies. The University supports interdisciplinary work through the Humboldt Institute for Interdisciplinary Marijuana Research and its Cannabis Studies lab, and hosts the annual Cannabis and Environmental Sustainability Symposium focused on advancing sustainable practices in the industry.

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14 Please improve the conversation by disagreeing thoughtfully and backing your claims with facts
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Paul
Guest
Paul
1 month ago

Twenty years too late.

melanopsin
Member
1 month ago
Reply to  Paul

More than 100 years too late:

Legal history of cannabis in the United States

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_history_of_cannabis_in_the_United_States

In the United States, regulation on the use, sale, and labeling of cannabis (legal term marijuana or marihuana) began at the state level in the early 20th century, and outright prohibitions began in the 1920s. By the mid-1930s, cannabis was regulated as a drug in every state, including 35 states that adopted the Uniform State Narcotic Drug Act.[1] The first national regulation was the Marihuana Tax Act of 1937.[2]

Kris
Guest
Kris
1 month ago

These are the only people making money off of Marijuana these days. The actual farmers aren’t.

Farce
Guest
Farce
1 month ago

What a load of BULLSHIT! And a waste of ONE MILLION DOLLARS! The best growers I knew were all destroyed by that wonderful corporate “legalization”. And here are the vultures and dung beetles to eat at the scraps …pitiful and disgusting load of crap only designed to take money from the chump kids in that chump program at Cal Poly…Never forget that HSU pushed all weed-adjacent everything out of town and was the big voice behind shutting down the 420 celebrations we used to have. But now here they are with their laptops and calculators gathering funding for “cannabis studies”. What a bunch of assholes…

Guess
Guest
Guess
1 month ago
Reply to  Farce

Amen

Thatguyinarcata
Guest
Thatguyinarcata
1 month ago
Reply to  Farce

At some point you’re going to have to let go of all this bitterness, or it’s just going to kill you.

There was always a near zero chance that our area would survive the inevitable legalization. The emerald triangle was built on a de facto monopoly on the illicit cannabis trade in the US that was based on a unique mix of local culture and remote and rugged terrain.

The state has never given a shit about us, so of course they weren’t going to look out for us when they eventually decided to legalize. That would put less money in their and their friend’s pockets, and that’s not how they get down.

But we live in the world we live in, not the one that we wish could be or imagine could have been. From everything I know of Dan Mar, he’s been a great voice for thoughtful engagement with our landscape and if he’s able to help identify and improve best practices for the farmers that did survive then that’s a good thing. If we’re ever able to reach actual sensible approaches to cannabis in this country there will be opportunity for local small growers again.

It sucks that the county chose to go the cash grab route in legalization and we failed as a community for not stopping them as it happened or holding them to account now. It also sucks that so many great growers let the dollar signs go to their head and set sense aside pretending that their 500 lb crop could sustain a stand alone brand in a legal market. I can’t even count the number of people I know that say they “lost their life savings” trying to go legal but don’t stop to think that the 100k+ they poured into branding and trips to try and do sales in the cities and special packaging and on and on was a straight up stupid decision. People should have set their egos aside for a moment and actually done the work to form cooperatives that could have afforded a real sales team to get them shelf space and kept the growers growing instead of trying to shmooze d bag LA shop owners.

Let’s stop playing the victim, accept our communities role in our collapse, remember who the county government folks that did their best to fleece everyone, and move on toward building something here that isnt based on boom-bust resource extraction.

Bozo
Guest
Bozo
1 month ago

IMHO: A million bucks for… WTF?

Dope is dead in Hum County. Might as well put a wooden stake in it.
Dope growers have departed to places where… it is actually good to grow crops.

At least it wasn’t taxpayer money.

Go figure.

melanopsin
Member
1 month ago
Reply to  Bozo

from the article:

farmers in six California counties—Humboldt, Trinity, Mendocino, Sonoma, Nevada, and Santa Cruz—to study regenerative agricultural practices.

One of the project’s main goals is to create a Cannabis Farm Assessment Protocol—a tool developed in collaboration with farmers to evaluate their practices and help other farmers adopt more sustainable ones.

The study will also explore the historical and cultural dimensions of cannabis farming in Northern California by documenting farmers’ knowledge and experiences in a region long associated with the crop.

“By documenting their experience and knowledge about the region, growing strategies and systems, risks and challenges, and innovations, we’re preserving an important cultural story about how this industry developed and continues to evolve,” says Nitzky. “Bringing together farmer knowledge and scientific research can help shape a more equitable and sustainable future for the cannabis industry in California and beyond.”

Bozo
Guest
Bozo
1 month ago
Reply to  melanopsin

You really believe the article ???

Thatguyinarcata
Guest
Thatguyinarcata
1 month ago
Reply to  Bozo

What are you even suggesting? That they are only going to conduct this research in Humboldt county actually?

random comment
Guest
random comment
1 month ago

Israel has been studying cannabis since the 60s.

THC (Δ9‑tetrahydrocannabinol) was first isolated and identified in 1964 by Dr. Raphael Mechoulam and colleagues at the Weizmann Institute in Israel. They isolated, elucidated the structure of, and later synthesized THC, establishing its role as cannabis’s primary psychoactive component.

https://www.yadhanadiv.org.il/ae-regenerative-agriculture/

It is really too bad about the poop bucket people.

jim immel
Guest
jim immel
1 month ago

Having developed a sustainable garden, hoping it would be a model for the community, My neighbor bulldozed and illegally cleared his neighbors parcel, by accident of course. Having to then buy it at an unimaginable price, he was then granted his permit and has been a scourge on our neighborhood. It is way too late to waste money on anything to do with cannabis. Sad to see money still being put into this industry. There is no benefit to sustainability in this industry when your competetitors are burning resources and selling in the black market with the silent nod of the government.

Thatguyinarcata
Guest
Thatguyinarcata
1 month ago
Reply to  jim immel

Its among the most economically valuable crops grown in the state (no hard numbers since so much of the market is still off books). It’s most likely going to continue to fall more and more into the regulated market as that market expands. No reason for the state to not study best practices to guide that expansion

Farmer
Guest
Farmer
1 month ago

This is really great news.