Changes to legislation will soon be introduced to allow the federal
government to grow cannabis for use in medical trials, the federal
health minister, Sussan Ley, has announced.
Ley is seeking parliamentary support to change the Narcotics Drugs
Act of 1967 to create a regulatory body to cultivate cannabis for state
trials of medical marijuana.
While the creation of medical trials and the issue of
decriminalisation are state-based ones, the commonwealth has a role in
regulating cultivation and importation of the drug.
States and territories are not able to legally grow cannabis for use
in medical trials, nor import the illegal drug. Creating a regulatory
body, which Ley describes as the “missing piece” of the puzzle, would
remove a major hurdle in the establishment of the state trials.
“Currently there are already systems in place to licence the
manufacture and supply of medicinal cannabis-based products in
Australia, however there is no mechanism to allow the production of a
safe, legal and sustainable local supply,” Ley said. “This has meant
Australian patients, researchers and manufacturers have had to try to
access international supplies of legal medicinal cannabis crops and
products, but limited supplies and export barriers in other countries
have made this difficult.”
“Allowing the cultivation of legal medicinal cannabis crops in
Australia under strict controls strikes the right balance between
patient access, community protection and our international obligations,”
the health minister said.
The three most populous states – New South Wales, Victoria and
Queensland – have pledged to hold trials on the effectiveness of
medicinal cannabis to provide pain relief for people suffering terminal
illnesses, control severe childhood epilepsy and for the treatment of
symptoms arising from chemotherapy.
The NSW government welcomed the announced.
“We believe the approach the federal government is taking is
sensible, measured and demonstrates forward thinking,” the NSW minister
for medical research, Prue Goward, said. “We do not want patients or
carers having to play pharmacist, this collaborative approach ensures we
have a way forward.”
A number of state governments are expected to put their hands up to
grow the crop once the regulation process is finalised, with the
industry likely to recoup millions for struggling state economies,
particular if Australia overcomes legal roadblocks to legally export the
drug to other countries.
The Tasmanian poppy industry, which produces 45% of the world’s opium for use in pharmaceutical painkillers, is worth $300m to the state annually.
All major political parties endorse the theoretical use of medical
marijuana, but differ on how best to deregulate and build the industry.
A cross-party bill, spearheaded by the leader of the Greens, former
doctor Richard Di Natale, wants the creation of a medical cannabis
regulator.
The bill was co-sponsored by Liberal, Labor, Greens and crossbench senators and is currently awaiting debate in the Senate.
Labor released a statement saying that it would create a national
scheme to allow “equity of access and a safe and reliable supply” of
medical marijuana by creating a federal licensing system for the growing
of the crop.
“We need to put in place, by working with the states and territories,
uniform criminal laws to exempt people from the fear of prosecution if
they’ve got legitimate access to medicinal cannabis for an approved
purpose, but we also need to sort out supply and only the Commonwealth
can do that,” the shadow assistant health minister, Stephen Jones, told
ABC TV.
Ley hopes that the changes to the 1967 act will be expedited and introduced into parliament by the end of the year.
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