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Ghana legalizes c@nnabis cultivation for industrial and medicinal use, invites applications for licences.

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Ghana has launched a licensing regime for the cultivation and management of industrial and medicinal cann@bis. The program, announced on February 26 by Interior Minister Muntaka Mohammed-Mubarak, allows individuals and companies to apply for permits covering cultivation, processing, research, laboratory testing, storage, transportation, and import/export.

Licensed cann@bis is restricted to varieties containing no more than 0.3% THC. Officials say the initiative aims to support production of industrial fibers, seeds, and pharmaceutical products while maintaining regulatory oversight.

The program faces legal scrutiny. Mariam Alhassan, a farmer from Techiman, filed a suit at the Supreme Court of Ghana, challenging the system as unconstitutional. She claims the framework’s “irrational design, exclusionary economic effect, and disproportionate exercise of administrative discretion” effectively blocks smallholder farmers from participating.

Alhassan also argues authorities “acted unfairly… by imposing materially higher fees” without a tiered licensing structure. Proposed fees reportedly range between $5,000 and $42,000, depending on the type of operation.

The Supreme Court case introduces uncertainty around Ghana’s emerging hemp industry, a potential driver of agricultural exports and investment.

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