From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

ASTM International's Committee on Cannabis (D37) began developing technical standards for cannabis stakeholders in 2017. [1] The committee was formed after a January conference hosted by American Public Health Association, [2] an organizational meeting on Feb. 28 at ASTM International's global headquarters in West Conshohocken, Pennsylvania, and approval by the organization's board of directors on April 25. [3] Americans for Safe Access (ASA) and many other organizations are partnering with ASTM International to develop seed-to-consumer quality standards that ASA say they hope become mandatory. [4] D37 includes several subcommittees: indoor and outdoor horticulture and agriculture; quality management systems; laboratory; processing and handling; security and transportation; and personnel training, assessment, and credentialing. [5]

References

  1. ^ Alicia Wallace (April 25, 2017), "International org takes on creating safety and other standards for cannabis industry", The Cannabist, The Denver Post
  2. ^ Aaron G. Biros (March 2, 2017), "ASTM International Launches Cannabis Committee", Cannabis Industry Journal
  3. ^ "In a Milestone Vote, ASTM Welcomes the Cannabis Industry". 25 April 2017.
  4. ^ "Standards development", Patient Focused Certification (website), Americans for Safe Access, retrieved 2017-04-27
  5. ^ Jack Maxwell (May–June 2017), "The Need for Cannabis Standards: New cannabis committee addresses industry demands for standards that support consistent testing, personnel training, and more", Standardization News, ASTM

External links


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

ASTM International's Committee on Cannabis (D37) began developing technical standards for cannabis stakeholders in 2017. [1] The committee was formed after a January conference hosted by American Public Health Association, [2] an organizational meeting on Feb. 28 at ASTM International's global headquarters in West Conshohocken, Pennsylvania, and approval by the organization's board of directors on April 25. [3] Americans for Safe Access (ASA) and many other organizations are partnering with ASTM International to develop seed-to-consumer quality standards that ASA say they hope become mandatory. [4] D37 includes several subcommittees: indoor and outdoor horticulture and agriculture; quality management systems; laboratory; processing and handling; security and transportation; and personnel training, assessment, and credentialing. [5]

References

  1. ^ Alicia Wallace (April 25, 2017), "International org takes on creating safety and other standards for cannabis industry", The Cannabist, The Denver Post
  2. ^ Aaron G. Biros (March 2, 2017), "ASTM International Launches Cannabis Committee", Cannabis Industry Journal
  3. ^ "In a Milestone Vote, ASTM Welcomes the Cannabis Industry". 25 April 2017.
  4. ^ "Standards development", Patient Focused Certification (website), Americans for Safe Access, retrieved 2017-04-27
  5. ^ Jack Maxwell (May–June 2017), "The Need for Cannabis Standards: New cannabis committee addresses industry demands for standards that support consistent testing, personnel training, and more", Standardization News, ASTM

External links



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