Wyoming Gov. Mark Gordon (R) has signed into law the state’s ban on delta-8 THC products, putting the state’s burgeoning hemp-derived cannabinoid industry into jeopardy, MJBizDaily reports.
According to Senate File 32, which lawmakers crafted to restrict the sale of intoxicating cannabinoids:
No person or licensee shall:
– Produce, process or sell hemp or hemp products containing more than three‑tenths of one percent (0.3%) THC on a dry weight basis when using post‑decarboxylation or another similarly reliable testing method;
– Add, alter, insert or otherwise include any synthetic substance into hemp or hemp products produced, processed or sold in accordance with this chapter.
Under the new rules, which take effect on July 1, officials will conduct chemical analysis inspections of hemp product retailers’ offerings to ensure they are legal.
Wyoming hemp retailers say the changes will put many companies out of business. Some are even worried that the law could jeopardize the sale of some CBD products in the state, which are non-intoxicating and utilized by millions for therapeutic purposes.
The market for hemp-derived delta-8 THC products has ballooned under the 2018 Farm Bill, which legalized industrial hemp and its byproducts nationwide. Delta-8 products are typically made by converting hemp-derived CBD and other cannabinoids into delta-8 THC.
Wyoming’s ban comes just days after the Arizona attorney general ruled that delta-8 sales are illegal, the report said.
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