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US Hopes Green Construction Awakens Japan’s Hemp Industry


By Jean Lotus

Experienced US hemp builders got to visit one of the first hempcrete homes in Japan – and to meet the builder – at the first Tokyo International Hemp Conference this week, organized by the Japan Industrial Hemp Association (JIHA). 

“We are still building hemp walls by hand,” Hiroaki Tajima of Tochigi-based Limbs, Ltd. construction, told visiting members from the US Hemp Building Association. “I’d like to build more houses,” Tajima added. “We are just at the beginning.”

New laws regarding the legalization of hemp in Japan, and new coalitions with Thailand, are opening up possibilities for the hemp industry for medicinal and industrial uses in both Asian countries. 

Twenty-six US hemp industry experts were brought to the conference in a delegation organized by the Washington DC-based National Industrial Hemp Coalition, and funded through grants from the USDA-Foreign Agricultural Service’s Regional Agricultural Promotion Program (RAPP). Members of the Thai Industrial Hemp Trade Association (TiHTA) organized the tour. 

US delegates included representatives from HempWood, IND Hemp, The Hemp Plastic Company, Oregon State University’s Global Hemp Innovation Center, We Are For Better Alternatives (WAFBA), US Hemp Building Assn., Hemp Building Institute, FyberX, Bear Fiber, and the Kentucky Hemp Farmers Cooperative among others, attended.

“Housing, shelter, food, clothing, medicine …” Patrick Atagi, CEO and Executive Director of the NIHC told conference attendees. “There is no other plant that meets the basic needs of people,” he added. 

The USDA has promoted hemp as a climate-smart specialty crop and renamed a key trade advisory committee to include hemp, naming Atagi to the committee. The RAPP program has allocated $300 million for promotion of US agricultural products to foreign markets. 


Industrial hemp is displayed at the Tochigi City hemp museum, which celebrates the successful hemp business of the Yokohama family, starting in 1869. Photo courtesy of Jean Lotus


Long history of hemp in Japan 

Hemp’s millenia-long history in Japan is complex. Until prohibition, hemp was deeply entwined in both ordinary and sacred parts of Japanese life. The highly adaptable plant was used for rope, fiber and textiles, but also had a divine significance in the Shinto religion.

In a visit to Tochigi Prefecture, US and Thai visitors got to see the historic role of both.

At the Tochigi City hemp museum, visiting Thai and US delegates learned about the successful hemp business of the Yokohama family. Starting in 1869, the family harvested and processed hemp for industrial uses which they shipped by canal to Edo (Tokyo). The company was so successful they also started the regional bank. 


Historic photos of the Yokohama family, who made their fortune growing and processing hemp, are displayed in the museum in Tochigi City. Photo courtesy of Jean Lotus

Later, the visitors got to see Japan’s hemp history in action. For eight generations, the Tochigi-based family farm Yashu-Asa (Golden Hemp) has grown and processed hemp for both secular and religious purposes. 


Workers process retted hemp stalks at Golden Hemp in Tochigi Prefecture, Japan. Photo courtesy of Jean Lotus


Shinto traditions

The shimenawa sacred hemp rope is found at the entrances to Shinto shrines. According to tradition, a divine spirit inhabits the shimenawa and prevents evil sprits from entering the shrine. White paper prayer ribbons and tassels are attached to the ropes, which are also used to protect sacred trees and rocks. Champion Japanese yokozuna  sumo wrestlers also wear a hemp-based rope belt.


A sacred shimenawa hemp rope serves as a divine protection from evil spirits at Shinto shrines and sacred space. Photo courtesy of Jean Lotus


Visiting one of the first hempcrete buildings in Japan

Golden Hemp’s proprietor, Yoshinori Oomuri, invited visitors to see one of the first hempcrete (hemp-lime) buildings in Japan (by Limbs’s Tajima). Visitors also built part of a wall for a new structure. The new walls demonstrated the local sustainability of hempcrete: Local hemp hurd was grown on-the-farm and stalks chipped onsite. They were added to a mixture of water, lime and locally sourced yellow magnesium-rich clay. 

“The built space is a place for people to gather,” said Ray Kaderli, president of the US Hemp Building Association. “People on this trip gathered to build connection and culture. Japan’s return to its connection to hemp is taking shape, in part, through new efforts to use hemp for buildings,” Kaderli continued. 


Yoshinori Oomuri, (R), owner of Golden Hemp speaks to an employee at a hempcrete workshop in Tochigi. Photo by Jean Lotus


Thailand’s hemp industry

Thailand has also adopted new laws for medical and recreational cannabis, as well as industrial hemp. The Thai Hmong hill-tribe people are experts in hemp textile manufacturing as well as batik and embroidering traditional hemp textiles, said Sharon Deidre “Dydy” Leyson, VP of international affairs at TiHTA.  

Oomuri and TiHTA Honorary Chairman Dr. Weerachai Nanakorn signed a memorandum of understanding to work together to build the hemp industry in both nations. Atagi said a new Asian hemp federation is being discussed. Later, the delegation met at the Thai ambassador’s Tokyo residence to network with US and Japanese hemp entrepreneurs.


Members of the US delegation to Japan pose in the Tokyo offices of the Thai ambassador. Photo courtesy of Bryan Dawson. 


Challenges: Building Japan’s hemp fiber market

Today, fiber hemp in Japan is mainly used for ceremonial purposes.

“For Japan to develop an industrial hemp industry, it would require both a revision of laws concerning cannabis cultivation licensing, as well as technical education on modern cultivation and uses of hemp,” wrote USDA-FAS author Tomohiro Kurai in The Japanese Market for Hemp Fiber in 2023. “Developing a market in Japan for U.S. hemp fiber for industrial uses would require a concerted effort and partnerships with manufacturers and construction industries,” Kurai added. 

“A lack of awareness of the benefits of hemp for industrial use and the high price remain the main barriers. Industry contacts have expressed hope that the price will come down as the industrial hemp industry becomes more established overseas.”


Sustainable climate goals and hemp’s special role

The hemp building industry is in its infancy in Japan, but new changes to hemp and cannabis regulations – and a focus on sustainability –  may boost opportunities for hemp building in the near future. 

The Japanese government and corporations are taking seriously the United Nations’s sustainable climate goals. Cutting the construction industry’s greenhouse gasses using hemp (and other natural building materials) can create healthier non-toxic homes. 

But most importantly, building with hemp could capture the Japanese imagination by acknowledging the plant’’s important stature in Japanese culture, US hemp builders believe.

“Just as pioneering US hempcrete builders have imported hemp hurd from Europe, there may be an opportunity to export US-grown hemp and technical training to Japan, to help get their industry off the ground,” said USHBA’s Kaderli.

 “The USHBA is honored to participate, help, and share ideas that will build homes, build connections to one another, and to build connection to the hemp plant in meaningful ways.”

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