Cannabis

Westmoreland Ganja Farmers Begin Regularization Push

The registration drive signals a different possibility: one where traditional growers are no longer treated only as informal actors, but as potential participants in a regulated industry.

That matters.

Jamaica’s legal cannabis industry cannot grow meaningfully without the communities that helped build the island’s global ganja reputation in the first place. Westmoreland, and Orange Hill in particular, carry deep cultural and agricultural significance within Jamaica’s ganja story.

The move toward registration is therefore more than an administrative exercise. It is a test of whether Jamaica can create a real bridge between traditional cultivation and the formal cannabis sector.

But registration is only the beginning.

The larger question is what happens next.

Long-standing ganja advocate Ras Iyah V raised that concern directly, noting that farmer registration must be followed by real market development.

“When you have all of these farmers producing ganja, how are these ganja going to be sold?” he asked, according to the Gleaner. He also noted that “access to the international market is not easy,” and suggested that an extraction facility in Westmoreland Western could help farmers move beyond raw flower into value-added products.

That question sits at the center of Jamaica’s cannabis future.

If farmers are brought into the legal system, they will need more than paperwork. They will need clear operating rules, access to markets, technical support, compliant processing, product development, financing, distribution, and buyers who can turn legal cultivation into sustainable income.

Without that next layer, legalization risks becoming symbolic rather than transformative.

Delroy Johnson, former chairman of the Westmoreland Hemp and Ganja Farmers Association (WHAGFA), also expressed caution about the process, describing the registration push as potentially “putting the cart before the horse” if farmers are signed up before the wider system is ready to support them.

Johnson said registration may help give farmers some status and ease pressure from police or narcotics enforcement, but the practical questions remain: How does a registered farmer operate? Who are they planting for? Where does the ganja go? How do they make money legally?

Those questions have to be answered quickly if the process is going to build confidence.

This is where Jamaica’s cannabis conversation has to expand.

A stronger legal cannabis ecosystem should include traditional farmers, licensed operators, wellness brands, processors, retailers, exporters, tourism stakeholders, and community-based enterprises. It should also create space for value-added products, including oils, topicals, soaps, wellness goods, nutraceuticals, spa products, and other compliant cannabis-adjacent offerings where regulations allow.

That is especially important in western Jamaica.

Westmoreland sits near one of the country’s most important tourism corridors. Negril remains one of Jamaica’s most recognized visitor destinations, with a strong history of culture, wellness, beach tourism, music, and ganja-friendly identity. If properly structured, the connection between Westmoreland’s cultivation communities and Jamaica’s tourism economy could become one of the most important opportunities in the next phase of cannabis development.

This does not mean turning farms into tourist attractions overnight.

It means building a responsible framework where agriculture, wellness, culture, compliance, hospitality, and local enterprise can work together.

That framework could include farmer education, cooperative models, compliant product development, wellness partnerships, destination storytelling, licensed retail pathways, and community-based tourism experiences that respect both the law and the culture.

The timing is important.

Jamaica is already discussing the future of tourism under the banner of Tourism 3.0, with emphasis on resilience, workforce development, communities, local participation, sustainability, and innovation. Traditional ganja farming communities should not be excluded from that conversation.

If Jamaica is serious about building a more inclusive tourism and cannabis economy, Westmoreland should be part of the national strategy.

That wider conversation is also central to the Caribbean Cannabis & Tourism Summit, which Ganjactivist.com is developing to connect cannabis operators, tourism stakeholders, policymakers, wellness professionals, investors, hoteliers, media, cultural leaders, and entrepreneurs around the future of ganja tourism in Jamaica and the wider Caribbean.

Learn more: Caribbean Cannabis & Tourism Summit

The registration of ganja farmers in Orange Hill may be an early step, but it points to a much larger issue: Jamaica now has an opportunity to connect traditional farmers to legal markets, value-added production, wellness, tourism, and rural development.

That opportunity should not be wasted.

The next phase must focus on market access, processing, standards, training, and real economic pathways for the communities that have carried Jamaica’s ganja legacy for generations.

Registration opens the door.

Now Jamaica has to build the industry around it.

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