Tag: packaging

  • New Virginia Hemp Law Forcing Some Shops to Close

    New Virginia Hemp Law Forcing Some Shops to Close

    Credit: RawF8

    The U.S. state of Virginia recently enacted a law to curb kid-friendly packaging in cannabis products. That law is having hard effects on some local businesses.

    Lawmakers have witnessed Delta-8 products sold in packaging that mimic foods that are enticing to kids, but those in the hemp industry say this new crackdown goes too far.

    “Were one of hundreds that’s made the hard decision to just shut it down,” Reed Anderson said.

    Anderson says he’s shutting down his Goochland hemp business, Kame Naturals, in the wake of a new state law cracking down on THC products like Delta-8.

    It limits all hemp products to only two milligrams of THC per package. That’s far lower than most products in many smoke and vape shops. Hemp products must now have at least a 25-to-1 ratio of CBD to THC, according to media reports.

    “25-to-1 ratio doesn’t do what we do justice right,” Anderson said. “We started our business as a solventless extraction company, and that over time kind of had to go to the wayside because of the different regulations coming through.”

    Breaking the rules could mean fines of up to $10,000.

    Anderson said it’s all too much and says lawmakers paid too much attention to the intoxicating effects of THC and very little to the health benefits THC may provide.

    “Once you start getting into remediated product and trying to remediate THC out of a product, you lose a lot of the natural quality CBD products offer,” Anderson said.

    However, Governor Glenn Youngkin and the law’s supporters said something needed to be done to stop the sale of Delta-8 products. Too many kids were getting sick.

    A statement from Gov. Youngkin’s office said in part:

    “SB 903 and HB 2294 took critical steps to strengthen consumer safety and regulations around edible and inhaled hemp-derived products as well as delta-8 THC products. Specifically, the amendment continued its efforts to crack down on dangerous THC intoxicants, including synthetic THC products. In addition to the ban on synthetic THC, the limited percentage of total THC allowed in hemp products, the packaging and labeling restrictions, the testing requirements, and the total per package limit for THC, the substitute also requires retailers to register with the Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (VDACS) to sell any edible or inhaled hemp-derived product. Additionally, the General Assembly established the registration requirement and fees as a necessary operating cost and to create a database of all regulated hemp product retail stores.”

    Anderson said while he’s no longer in the hemp business, he will become an advocate and plan to talk with politicians as often as he can to get these laws reformed.

  • New Zealand: New Vapor Packaging Rules Go Into Effect

    New Zealand: New Vapor Packaging Rules Go Into Effect

    New Zealand flag on boat
    Credit: govt.nz

    Thousands of vaping products in New Zealand started being removed from store shelves Friday as new regulations on packaging come into effect.

    The move is part of the amended Smokefree Vaping Act rolled out 15 months ago, which includes it only being legal to sell vape products registered with the Ministry of Health, according to 1News.

    Action for Smokefree 2025 director Deborah Hart on Friday told Breakfast the new regulations mean manufacturers need to be more transparent about what’s in their products.

    “The Government has been rolling out regulations right from the very start of the (Smokefree Environments and Regulated Products) Act. So from the start of the Act until today, one of the things we’ve been doing is around the safety of the product,” she said.

    “Six months ago importers and manufacturers had to start notifying what was in their products – had to notify labels, packaging and what’s in the products.

    “And today they had to do all that, they can only sell what’s been notified, and to notify they had to adhere to the safety regime that had been set up by the Government. So that’s fantastic.”

  • ReStalk Partners With Fiber Company to Process Hemp

    ReStalk Partners With Fiber Company to Process Hemp

    ReStalk, Inc has entered into a licensing agreement with Sustainable Fiber Technologies (SFT) enabling the company to utilize the SFT’s suite of IP to process hemp into cellulose pulp and biopolymers. These polymers are used to make vapor product packaging, among many other items.

    hemp fiber
    Credit: ReStalk

    The partnership allows SFT to assist ReStalk in the developing hemp-based pulp and board products. “ReStalk is an excellent company with the foresight into both the paper and packaging arena. Their team and expertise of hemp cultivars makes ReStalk a perfect licensee for the Phoenix Process,” said Mark Lewis CEO of SFT. “Domestically, the demand for hemp pulp has never been higher, it provides a quality non-wood fiber that competes with softwood fiber.”

    ReStalk’s first project with the SFT license will be building a a pulp mill capable of producing100 tons-per-day of pulp. “We’re eager to provide the infrastructure needed to stabilize this re-emerging crop,” said Lucas Hildebrand, ReStalk’s chief strategy officer. “This project will strengthen the supply chain and manufacturing of hemp’s downstream products here in the US. We’re excited to get to work and lay the foundation for a more regenerative model of production.”

    As the pandemic caused by COVID-19 continues to disrupt global supply chains, the need for scalable sustainable solutions has never been more necessary, according to a press release. The mill positions ReStalk as the largest supplier of American manufactured hemp pulp.

    “Consumer demand for new sources of sustainable packaging is accelerating worldwide. Along with forest-based fibers, we see tremendous interest in hemp and similar alternative agricultural fibers,” said Warren Pullen, executive vice president for Central National Gottesman, a pulp, paper, packaging, tissue and non-wovens distribution. “We believe ReStalk has the potential to successfully address unmet demand for hemp fiber and take green packaging to the next level.”