ANAHEIM, Calif. – Soy milk, almond butter, kale chips, chai … CBD.
Natural products businesses are no strangers to ferrying once-unknown ingredients and supplements into the mainstream, and if the prognosticators at the industry’s largest trade show are correct, cannabidiol could be “the next big thing.”
The cannabis compound took center stage at Natural Products Expo West on Wednesday when the massive trade show hosted its first-ever CBD Summit. The goal, organizers said, was to provide a glimpse of the market potential for products made with the hemp-based extract.
“(CBD) is like anything that’s innovative and on-trend and disruptive — it tends to start in health foods stores, whether it’s pomegranate or plant protein or almond milk or CBD,” said Todd Runestad, the ingredients and supplements editor for New Hope Network, the Boulder-based media company that puts on the expo, now in its 38th year.
Panelists at Natural Products Expo West’s summit were bullish on CBD.
“This is the hottest product in the history of natural products, and there’s an opportunity for retailers to really sink their teeth into this whole hemp category,” Josh Hendrix, director of business development for Las Vegas-based extract company CV Sciences Inc., told some 500 people in attendance.
A stream of doctors, lawyers, retailers and producers discussed how the non-psychoactive CBD — or, more specifically, “hemp-derived, full-spectrum phytocannabinoid” products — could contribute to a $140 billion industry focused on health-and-wellness products. They equated cannabinoids to the emergence of Vitamin C or fish oils, claiming untapped opportunities for members of the natural products industry to supply consumers’ dietary, nutritional and wellness needs.
Natural and specialty retail stores accounted for approximately 14 percent of the $190 million in U.S. hemp-based CBD sales in 2017, according to according to Hemp Business Journal data presented Wednesday.
But by 2022, natural products retailers should have a significantly bigger slice of a significantly bigger pie.
The U.S. hemp-based CBD market is projected to hit $646 million by 2022, according to Hemp Business Journal, with 28 percent of those sales occurring in the natural and specialty channel.
Related: Lucky’s Market takes leap with CBD oil, selling hemp extracts nationwide
By that point, overall U.S. CBD sales could be north of $1.9 billion, with GW Pharmaceuticals’ CBD-based Epidiolex drug accounting for nearly one-third of sales and marijuana- and hemp-derived CBD splitting the remaining share, said Sean Murphy, publisher of the Denver-based Hemp Business Journal.
Complicating growth projections is the fact that CBD’s legality has questioned the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.
The DEA stirred confusion in the industry in December 2016, when it filed a rule notice for the creation of a Controlled Substances Code Number for “marihuana extracts.”
As the rule was finalized a month later, it met opposition by the hemp industry, which filed a petition in the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The hemp industry’s lawyers, citing a 2004 circuit court ruling on hemp and the 2014 Farm Bill, have asserted that the DEA made a scheduling action against hemp and hemp-derived extracts and created a rule that has resulted in illegal seizures of hemp products.
The court is not expected to rule on that case until later this year.
The DEA rule shook the confidence of retailers, manufacturers and even Expo West’s organizers in CBD, said New Hope Network’s Runestad. However, after some developments in 2017 — notably the Hemp Industries Association’s case against the DEA and the move by natural specialty retailer Lucky’s Market to carry lines of hemp extracts nationwide — trade show officials embraced hemp-derived extracts, he said.
“That opened the floodgates,” he said.
When the Natural Products Expo West kicked off Wednesday, the cannabis compound was listed as a top trend to watch in 2018, and the CBD Summit was a hot ticket, with attendees spilling out of a Marriott hotel ballroom, Runestad said. Two-dozen hemp-extract companies are exhibiting at the trade show, and long-established players in retail and consumer packaged goods prowled the floor to give hemp-based products a closer look.
When it comes to the cannabis plant, the natural products industry can see beyond THC, said Jim Hamilton, chief executive officer of Neptune Wellness Solutions, a Quebec-based nutritional products company.
“(Customers are) looking for inflammation (treatments), they’re looking for sleep aids, they’re looking for anxiety relief,” he said.
Neptune, known for krill oils, recently expanded its offerings to include cannabinoid-based products.
“Think of all the people taking sleeping pills and all the people taking opioids,” Hamilton said. “I think there’s a whole community that is going to want to embrace elements of this business.”
Learn more about cannabidiol in The Cannabist’s Special Report:
CBD, TBD
Part I – Forbidden medicine: Caught between a doctor’s CBD advice and federal laws
Part II – How advocates are inspiring congressional action on CBD legalization
Part IV – CBD research is going to the dogs in quest to legitimize pet products
Part VI – Race for CBD medication breakthrough: Is pharma firm’s boon the hemp industry’s doom?
Part VII – Cannabinoids on local grocery shelves, but for how long?