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Voice of America

Who Will Win in Thailand’s Cannabis Industry?

Photo Credit: AP / TPG Images

By Vijitra Duangdee

KORAT, THAILAND — For three years, Lek secretly cultivated her cannabis plants in rural northeastern Thailand, still afraid of arrest by authorities wielding tough drug penalties despite the promises of a gradual loosening of the law.

On June 9, cannabis was effectively decriminalized and she finally emerged from the underground weed scene to become a legitimate grower, part of an army of newcomers to the most-hyped market in Thailand. 

“We’re in a ‘vacuum period’ so anyone can practically do anything for now,” said Lek 34, whose full name is Piyatida Jantra, as she prunes her 100 or so plants in Korat.

The area is the gateway to Isaan, a region of rice and sugar farmers facing plummeting prices for their staples and in desperate need of a new cash crop.

Thailand is the first Southeast Asian country to take such liberalizing steps, recognizing the medicinal — and economic — benefits the plant may bring.

The country’s journey toward becoming a paradise for cannabis consumers and entrepreneurs is unexpected in a kingdom where successive governments have taken a zero-tolerance attitude toward drugs.

The change began with a 2019 election pledge by Anutin Charnvirakul, a connected billionaire with big political ambitions, who promised to unlock the law to help farmers in the Isaan area with a new cash crop primarily for the medicinal market.

Isaan is the most highly populated part of Thailand and will be crucial in securing votes in the next general election, scheduled in the first quarter next year.

Turning on the tap to billions of dollars of new potential revenue also was warmly welcomed by the monopolies that dominate the Thai economy — and backed by the army-linked government, in which Anutin serves as health minister.

Major corporations and rich private investors got ahead of the law, buying up vast plantations to grow cannabis in the best soils across the north and northeast, and establishing factories to extract premium CBD oil.

That left them in a position to seize market share when last month’s decriminalization made it legal to grow, trade, and use all cannabis products, from the leaves and stems to the bud. 

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Photo Credit: AP / TPG Images
Entrepreneurs learn how to grow cannabis plants at a cannabis farm in Chonburi province, eastern Thailand on June 5, 2022.

Legally restricted for medicine or food

Currently, cannabis is in theory restricted to use in medicine or in food and must contain less than 0.2% tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the compound that creates the “high.”

In practice, it is a legal gray area that has ruled out prosecutions under drug laws; there is currently not even a minimum legal age to buy or sell it. 

A cannabis bill is due in the coming months to detail exactly what can and can’t be done.

For smallholders like Lek, there are fears it will be written with the interests of large corporations in mind, rather than homespun businesses like hers.

“The government needs to go all the way … where every household can grow their own, no more controls,” she told VOA News.

“But once the law is passed, I guarantee you there’s only going to be one big group of capitalists who will gain.”

Amsterdam of Asia

At present, cannabis chaos pervades the kingdom: Tourists are openly smoking joints on the famous Khao San Road in Bangkok, while some Thais have appeared on TikTok videos seemingly unable to move after eating marijuana brownies. The government has urged cannabis growers and users to be responsible and discreet.

“The main goal of weed legalization is still for medicinal benefits, to boost the economy and wellness,” the prime minister’s spokesperson told reporters on June 29.

“We ask that everyone cooperates during this vacuum period until the official law is passed.

Weed aficionados are celebrating a law change allowing a long-hidden culture into the light. It’s also stirring a major market opportunity and research into the benefits of a plant found native in Thailand for centuries.

“Everyone will have their own space within this industry,” said Chokwan “Kitty” Chopaka, an advocate and entrepreneur who has been bombarded by inquiries since opening her dispensary in downtown Bangkok a couple of days after it became legal. 

“It’s not just growers, sellers, and consumers … we still also need researchers, accountants, marketeers, product photographers.”

Other industry insiders say there is no rolling back the law.

One of those is Siriya Thepcharoen, based at Siam Cannabis Land in Chonburi, eastern Thailand, which includes a museum, vast underground laboratories growing weed strains like “White Widow,” and a plantation. She said the mission of her company, NUSA CSR, is to help make Thailand the global hub for medicinal marijuana use.

“We are targeting medical tourists with certain conditions like insomnia, stress, Alzheimer’s, and for the elderly who also want to come to Thailand for R&R,” she told VOA.

“But we will also target young people who may travel here for recreation, seeing Thailand as the ‘Amsterdam of Asia.’”

The News Lens has been authorized to publish this article from Voice of America.

READ NEXT: How the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework Works — And How It Will Affect Taiwan

TNL Editor: Bryan Chou (@thenewslensintl)

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