Rob Eccles Agronomy & Agribusiness Services

Rob Eccles Agronomy & Agribusiness Services Agricultural Consultant - Agribusiness and Agronomy

Here’s the link again to the Short‑Term High‑Performance Pasture Podcast 🎧With conditions still dry across our temperate...
19/04/2026

Here’s the link again to the Short‑Term High‑Performance Pasture Podcast 🎧
With conditions still dry across our temperate, high‑rainfall zone in eastern Australia, this approach is well worth considering when the next meaningful rainfall event arrives.
These pastures are more winter‑active, deliver greater liveweight gain per hectare per 100 mm of rainfall, and support faster daily weight gains—helping move livestock off farm sooner and closer to market specifications. Added benefits include improved soil carbon accumulation and lower methane emissions.
The sowing window runs from April to September, and I can tailor a mix to suit your system—whether you’re looking at an annual, biannual, or 3–5‑year option.

Podcast Episode · In The Paddock · 17 February 2023 · 1hr 6min

12/04/2026

Why Isn’t H**p Widely Grown in Australia?

Many people are surprised to learn that industrial h**p—one of the most versatile crops on the planet—is still barely grown in Australia. H**p can be used as a sustainable food source, building material, textile, biofuel, and even as a soil remediator. So why isn’t it grown everywhere?

The short answer is regulatory baggage.
For much of the 20th century, h**p was lumped in with ma*****na. Although all Australian states legalised industrial h**p roughly a decade ago, the stigma and bureaucratic hurdles never fully disappeared. Regulations remain a state‑by‑state patchwork. Some states make h**p relatively easy to grow; others still treat it like a controlled substance, with excessive licensing, testing requirements, and strict crop destruction rules if THC thresholds are exceeded. In many jurisdictions, h**p cannot be used for grazing or as a green manure crop.

In practice, “legal” and “viable” are very different things.
Investor confidence remains weak, and contrary to social media narratives, h**p is not an easy crop to grow well. Achieving optimal yield and quality is agronomically demanding, and processing adds further complexity. Australia also faces a major infrastructure gap. We dismantled most of our h**p supply chain more than a century ago—processing facilities, decorticators, and established markets disappeared. Today, many farmers simply have nowhere nearby to process the crop, making the economics difficult.

This is despite the fact that one of the First Fleet’s original missions was to establish h**p production for rope and sailcloth to support the British naval empire.

The potential uses remain compelling. H**pcrete is lightweight, carbon‑negative, mould‑resistant, and an excellent insulator. H**p seed is a complete plant protein containing essential fatty acids, including Omega‑3, 6, and 9, in ratios well suited to human nutrition. Few domesticated crops match h**p’s diversity of applications.

Yet major agricultural, timber, and petrochemical interests have limited incentives to support h**p’s expansion. Meanwhile, countries investing now—such as Canada, China, and parts of Europe—are building infrastructure and expertise that will give them a lasting advantage.

Australia has a unique opportunity. Unlike the Northern Hemisphere’s single annual harvest, we can grow and harvest h**p year‑round, enabling a continuous supply chain that supports cash flow and downstream processing. Transitioning now is not just good agricultural policy—it is sound economics.

Industrial h**p isn’t failing in Australia because it doesn’t work — it’s failing because we’ve made it too hard to let it work. While other countries build infrastructure and capture markets, we’re still trapped in outdated regulations and misplaced fears. The opportunity is here, the agronomy is proven, and the economics make sense. The only question left is whether Australia is willing to move past the baggage and lead — or keep watching others do it first.

Look at this Australian-bred industrial h**p variety with an effective taproot even in heavy, black clay, self-mulching ...
14/11/2025

Look at this Australian-bred industrial h**p variety with an effective taproot even in heavy, black clay, self-mulching soil.

Just finished an AgriFutures Podcast on Industrial H**p
26/09/2025

Just finished an AgriFutures Podcast on Industrial H**p

I'm noticing a multitude of visits to this FB Page and then phone calls/emails on planting industrial h**p. As it is the...
11/08/2025

I'm noticing a multitude of visits to this FB Page and then phone calls/emails on planting industrial h**p. As it is the beginning of planting time for ih**p in the Southern half of Queensland, here is a checklist for our state:

Industrial H**p Pre-Planting Checklist – Queensland

1. Licensing & Legal Requirements

Apply for a licence via Biosecurity Queensland, under the Drugs Misuse Act 1986 and Regulation 1987. You can choose between:
- Grower licence
-Researcher licence
-Seed handler licence
Application fees (as of July 1, 2025):
- Grower licence: $1,430.23
- Renewal: $1,161.71
- Amendments: $323.27

2. THC Limits & Seed Certification

- Seed used for planting must come from h**p with ≤ 0.5% THC.
- Crops must contain ≤ 1% THC in leaves and flowering heads to remain legal.

3. Record-Keeping & Compliance

You must maintain records detailing:
- Volume and type of material in your possession
- Quantities and dates of planting
- THC test results

4. Activity Restrictions

- Under a grower licence, CBD/oleoresin extraction or medicinal cannabis use is strictly prohibited.
- You can only produce h**p for fibre and seed, and any resulting products must comply with food or fibre regulations.

5. Licensing Other Participants

-Analysts (for THC testing), manufacturers, or handlers of processed h**p must have appropriate approvals or licenses—even if they’re not growers or researchers.

6. Other Federal & Food Standards

- If producing h**p seeds or oil for human consumption, they must meet Food Standards Australia New Zealand (FSANZ) requirements—including labelling.

7. Agronomy & Varieties

- One third of crops fail, one third of crops are not economically viable, and the balance are good to excellent in terms of yield and dollar return.
- Consider connecting to resources like AgriFutures Australia’s fact sheet on varietal selection and the Industrial H**p Variety Trials (IHVT) network for the best varieties suited to QLD conditions. However, no effective Queensland trials were conducted. The only Queensland trial for two years was done SE of Stanthorpe in granite grazing country.
- Personally, I would recommend discussing this with a h**p agronomist or directly with the seed seller. You need to express to them your latitude and intended end use to get a variety recommendation. Chose wrongly and the crop either crops too short or too tall. Generally, a failure for your intended use.
- Use a h**p agronomist and use the recommended BMP to optimise your crop yield.
- Do not listen to social media "wisdoms" or pot growers. They are usually wrong and misleading with knowledge gaps.

8. Business Foundations

As with any agribusiness, you’ll need:
- Have the crop pre-sold via a contract before planting.
- A business plan outlining market, inputs, costs, and revenue streams
- Registered business structure and ABN
- Compliance with council zoning, biosecurity, privacy, consumer law, etc.

Summary Table: QLD Snapshot

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