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    Home » Big Alcohol’s Push to Save Hemp THC Drinks Comes With a Catch
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    Big Alcohol’s Push to Save Hemp THC Drinks Comes With a Catch

    adminBy adminMarch 26, 202604 Mins Read0 Views
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    Big Alcohol’s Push to Save Hemp THC Drinks Comes With a Catch
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    As a federal ban nears, alcohol industry power players are pushing to keep hemp THC beverages alive through a regulatory system they already know well.

    Big Alcohol has spent years watching hemp THC beverages eat into its territory. Now that a federal crackdown is on the horizon, the industry is not asking Congress to leave the category alone. It is backing a version of regulation that would bring hemp THC drinks closer to its own system.

    As reported by IgniteIt’s A.J. Herrington, the Wine & Spirits Wholesalers of America has launched a campaign calling for intoxicating hemp beverages to be regulated under a federal framework modeled on alcohol, rather than wiped out by the ban set to take effect on November 12, 2026.

    On paper, that sounds like progress. And to be clear, support for fighting bans and replacing them with workable regulation matters. The hemp beverage industry needs allies in Washington, and right now it cannot afford to be picky about where that support comes from. But read a little closer and this also looks like a push to shape the category in ways that would give established alcohol players more influence over its future.

    WSWA is not just opposing prohibition. It is pushing a full alcohol-style system with federal supplier and distributor licensing, taxes, testing requirements, trade practice rules and state-by-state control over where products can be sold. That does not mean the group is wrong to oppose a ban. It does suggest that the industry sees an opportunity to help write the rules for a fast-growing market before somebody else does.

    That shift did not happen in a vacuum. Last year, federal legislation signed by President Donald Trump imposed a 0.4 milligram total THC per container limit on hemp-derived consumer products, a threshold that would effectively wipe out much of the current hemp beverage market. By then, THC drinks had already started showing up in major retail channels and were being closely watched by alcohol companies as a growing competitive threat.

    That is the context that matters. Hemp THC beverages did not suddenly become respectable in the eyes of alcohol wholesalers because of some newfound commitment to cannabis reform. They became harder to ignore because consumers have shown there is real demand for a legal, low-dose alternative to alcohol, and because industries tend to get interested when a new category becomes too big to dismiss.

    Total Wine & More has also filed to lobby on hemp-derived drinks, another sign that established alcohol players no longer see the category as a fringe curiosity. They see it as a business. The question now is whether Congress will create a regulated lane forward, or whether a ban will kick in first and collapse the legal market before the rules are rewritten.

    That is where the politics get especially revealing. The old debate around hemp intoxicants was framed as a choice between public safety and an unregulated free-for-all. But the real split now is more specific. It is about whether hemp beverages survive as an independent cannabis-adjacent category, or whether they get folded into an alcohol-style system that favors large distributors, major retailers and companies with the money to navigate federal licensing, tax compliance and state-level access fights.

    Some state and local officials are already struggling with that exact question. In February, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson vetoed a city ordinance that would have banned intoxicating hemp products, arguing that the proposal was premature and should not move ahead without a clearer statewide framework. Other jurisdictions have moved in the opposite direction, tightening restrictions or imposing their own regulatory systems as lawmakers scramble to catch up with a market that has moved much faster than the law.

    That leaves hemp beverage brands in a familiar position. They need influential allies fighting bans and backing regulation. But they also have reason to be wary of any system that leaves too much control in the hands of incumbent alcohol interests.

    For cannabis consumers, that should sound familiar too. Support is support, and in a moment like this it matters. But there is a difference between protecting a category and positioning yourself to dominate it.

    So yes, Big Alcohol is joining the fight over hemp THC drinks. The industry’s support could help stop a damaging ban and move the conversation toward regulation. But it also signals a desire to shape, and possibly control, what comes next. Hemp operators may welcome the help. That does not mean they should hand over the whole market.

    Photo: Shutterstock

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