Home » Farming and Environment » Mallee farmer salutes hemp as crop of future

Mallee farmer salutes hemp as crop of future

A MALLEE farmer who planted his first round of hemp crops has hailed the environmentally friendly and diverse plant as “the crop of the future”, appealing to other local farmers to get on board.

Tony Smith recently planted two hectares of hemp, with plans to grow up to 50 hectares.

“We’ve had the farm for about 145 years, but the river over the last 15 years has been a little unreliable, with it going dry on us, so we wanted to look at a crop that isn’t going to perish if there was no water in the river,” he said.

“Hemp seemed to be the thing to go with. It is great for the environment, there are so many benefits to the crop compared to leucaena or cotton, and so many more things you can do with it.”

He said hemp had up to 60 different uses, but he was growing it for the fibre and the seeds.

“We will send it down to Melbourne and it will be used for building products,” he said.

“It can be used in hempcrete, which is used to build houses. They make boards out of it for flooring, it is used for installation, it is used for weed matting, it is used in the fire wall of cars because it is fireproof up to 4000 degrees, clothing – there are numerous uses.”

Mr Smith said hemp was also an environmentally friendly crop.

“Trees are renewable for building but it takes 10 years to grow a tree, they take carbon dioxide out of the air and produce oxygen and hemp does the same thing but better, and you need less of it to do the job a tree does,” he said.

“It also uses less water and makes your soil better once you grow it.”

Mr Smith said there were very few hemp farmers in the Mallee but he expected it to grow in popularity.

“It is not big at all because you have to go and get a license and jump through hoops to grow it,” he said.

“You have to have a good criminal record, have an audit done on your property and it can’t be too close to schools.

“It has to be three per cent THC (tetrahydrocannabinol, the principal psychoactive constituent of cannabis) or below. They come and do a walk through of the crop three times a year and if the THC is over five per cent you have to destroy the crop.

“It’s a small industry now but they want more people to grow it in Australia, so they don’t have to import so much. They’d rather have an Australian market so I think it will grow quickly.”

Digital Editions


  • Bowls Notes

    Bowls Notes

    RACECOURSE Congratulations to Mick Holyoak, who won his semi-final of the Champion of Champions against Danny Kelly of Lake Boga and then backed it up…

More News

  • Thefts across the region

    Thefts across the region

    SWAN HILL Theft: A REGISTRATION plate, a new Kings Swag still in its box and a bag were stolen from a vehicle parked in Barnett Street between 3.30pm Friday, 30…

  • Unflinching debut for local author

    Unflinching debut for local author

    RAW, real, honest – Charlie Hovenden’s debut memoir Fierce and Unstoppable has received praise for laying bare her daily strength and courage through MS and the sudden death of her…

  • Rams charge towards top spot

    Rams charge towards top spot

    THE final round of the Northern Valley Premier League is upon us, and it’s a two-battle for first place on the ladder, contested between Murray Downs and Cohuna Golf. How…

  • Support grows in regions

    Support grows in regions

    A REDBRIDGE federal poll released last week found One Nation’s primary vote had risen to 26 per cent, eight points lower than Labor (34) and seven points above the former…

  • Moulamein notes

    Moulamein notes

    Comedy act No, the Richmond footy team isn’t coming to town — but something just as exciting is. It’s not often we see an international comedy act roll through our…

  • Mass fish death

    Mass fish death

    AFTER further investigation into the fish deaths reported throughout the week near Menindee, the Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water has released a community update outlining its…

  • Back to school blessing

    Back to school blessing

    ANGLICAN NEWS It was great to have students and adults bringing symbols of their planned 2026 learning to be blessed on Sunday. Along with the blessing, Rev Julie gave appropriate…

  • SHDCA Round 12 Cricket Previews

    SHDCA Round 12 Cricket Previews

    Nyah District v RSL While last Saturday’s abandoned round has all but sealed reigning premier Nyah District’s fate, the Demons will still have plenty to play for when they host…

  • Training policy axed in council clash

    Training policy axed in council clash

    A COUNCILLOR training policy has been thrown in the bin, with one councillor labelling it an “overreach and a policy that we don’t need”. The policy was designed to formalise…

  • Homecoming to Mallee roots

    Homecoming to Mallee roots

    AFTER a lifetime of exhibiting and working in countries across the globe, woodturner and sophisticate Terry Martin has returned home. The internationally acclaimed artist grew up in the early 60s…