The United National Congress (UNC) is promising to implement a comprehensive framework to regulate large-scale cultivation, agro-processing, and export of cannabis, which the party says is essential to unlocking the industry’s full economic potential.
The promise is part of the party’s rollout of mini-manifestos ahead of the April 28 General Election.
The UNC noted that although the Government decriminalised the possession of small amounts of cannabis in December 2019 and allowed the cultivation of up to four plants, there have been no legal dispensaries and no consistent monitoring of the quality or origin of supply.
The UNC said in place of legal dispensaries, people are instead buying on street corners from drug pushers.
The party notes that the global cannabis market is projected to exceed US$100 billion by 2030, with demand spanning medical cannabis, oils and edibles.
“For Trinidad and Tobago, this represents an opportunity to position cannabis/hemp as an agricultural product akin to sugarcane or cocoa—where small farmers can participate alongside larger entities in cultivation or agro-processing,” the party said.
The UNC said despite decriminalisation, several roadblocks exist, including an incomplete regulatory framework, export limitations and an underdeveloped agro-processing sector.
The party promises to provide incentives and training programmes for small farmers interested in cultivating commercial cannabis and facilitate cooperatives where small farmers can pool resources to access agro-processing facilities or sell crops to larger entities.
The UNC also intends to develop partnerships with Caribbean Community (Caricom) leaders to harmonise standards for medical cannabis exports and position T&T as a key supplier of pharmaceutical-grade cannabis products in developed markets.
“The cannabis industry will create jobs across the cultivation, processing, distribution and export sectors. Small farmers will be empowered to participate in this sector alongside larger entities. Trinidad will join regional leaders like Jamaica in capitalising on international demand for cannabis products,” the document said.
The UNC has not yet unveiled a full manifesto and has chosen instead to publish mini documents outlining promises related to specific sectors.