Fiji Legalized Hemp Nearly Four Years Ago. Where Are The Results?
On 29 July 2022, Fiji's Parliament passed amendments to the Illicit Drugs Control Act that removed low-THC industrial hemp from the category of prohibited cannabis. The law came into force on 1 August 2022 and was presented as an opportunity to create new agricultural industries, attract investment, and diversify Fiji's economy.
The legislation created a legal pathway for industrial hemp cultivation, processing, trade, and potential industry development.
Nearly four years later, a more important question deserves attention:
What measurable results has Fiji achieved since legalization?
This is not a question about ideology.
It is not a question about recreational cannabis.
It is not even primarily a question about hemp.
It is a question about policy implementation.
Legalization Was Never The End Goal
When the legislation passed in 2022, the objective was not simply to change the law.
The objective was economic activity.
Laws by themselves do not create jobs.
Laws do not create exports.
Laws do not create industries.
Implementation does.
The relevant question in 2026 is no longer whether hemp should be legal.
Parliament already answered that question.
The relevant question is whether the legal pathway created in 2022 has translated into measurable economic outcomes.
What Should Success Look Like?
An evidence-based assessment requires objective indicators.
For example:
• How many hemp licences have been issued?
• How many hectares are under cultivation?
• How many farmers are participating?
• How much private investment has been attracted?
• How many jobs have been created?
• What volume of hemp products has been exported?
• What tax revenue has been generated?
These are not political questions.
They are performance indicators.
If the numbers are strong, Fiji has a success story.
If the numbers are weak, policymakers should explain why.
The Missing Data Problem
One challenge facing any serious assessment is the limited publicly available information regarding the industry's actual performance.
Without transparent reporting, the public is left with competing narratives instead of evidence.
This creates a simple problem:
Success cannot be measured if the results are not publicly measured.
An industry does not become successful because people believe it is successful.
It becomes successful because outcomes can be demonstrated.
Yandra Mai Viti
Sign the petition for Cannabis Reform in Fiji: www.change.org/p/decriminalize-cannabis-in-fiji-for-our-health-wealth-and-justice
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