(Reuters) – Wildfires blazing through Southern California are worrying marijuana growers, who fear that smoke could damage their crops, the basis of a newly legalized industry in the state.
For the cannabis industry, recovering like the rest of the state from devastating fires two months ago that killed 44 people and ravaged scores of pot farms north of San Francisco’s Bay area, the new wave of wildfires comes at a challenging time.
“This year has been some of the highest highs and lowest lows, where we’ve made so much progress toward a legal, regulated, normal future,” Hezekiah Allen, executive director of the California Growers Association, said by telephone. “But at the same time, we’ve had these catastrophic fires.”
Four major fires in the Los Angeles area have forced 200,000 people to flee and destroyed hundreds of homes. And the region’s westward Santa Ana winds blowing hot and dry from the California desert could exacerbate the situation.
Things could be worse for the marijuana industry in the state, Allen said, except for the fact that particularly hard-hit Ventura County does not issue permits for pot farms.
The smoke billowing from the latest…