
எங்களுக்கு. industrial hemp production jumped 40% in value to $445 million in 2024—with acreage up 64% and floral hemp output soaring 159%. This isn’t just a crop—it’s a revolution.
இல் 2024, எங்களுக்கு. தொழில்துறை சணல் production catapulted to a staggering $445 million—an increase of nearly 40% from the year before. Acreage planted for hemp climbed to 45,294 ஏக்கர், up 64% from 2023. Floral hemp, used for CBD and hemp‑THC extracts, saw production skyrocket by 159% and yields jump to an average of 1,757 pounds per acre.
This surge reflects surging demand across multiple sectors—nutraceuticals, sustainable textiles, bioplastics, விலங்கு தீவனம், and even building materials. Once dismissed as a fringe crop, industrial hemp is now firmly in the mainstream spotlight. In states like South Dakota and Texas, fiber hemp is leading the way—in South Dakota, 3,900 acres planted (up 22%) resulted in 13.6 million pounds harvested, reaffirming its status as a processing powerhouse
Agronomists and economists see a ripple effect: startup incubators, commodity traders, and even state agriculture agencies doubling down on hemp research. USDA projections show sustained growth: from $11 billion globally in 2024 to more than $30 billion by 2029—an annual CAGR of 22–23%
But growth comes with caution: the boom hinges on federal policies, regulatory clarity, and infrastructure capacity. Processing bottlenecks, variable quality control, and inconsistent state rules (especially around hemp‑THC beverages) threaten momentum. Industry insiders argue that smarter, unified regulation and investment in local processing facilities are essential to keep pace with demand.





