Terpene labels divide cannabis Manufacturers
The flavour starts of the cannabis world, terpenes, are moving out of the realm of die-hard cannabis enthusiasts and becoming better known for the role the compounds play in the taste, aroma, and mouthfeel of products at all THC levels. But the chemicals responsible for cannabis smells from fruity to skunky are also attracting controversy from those who say terpenes Labels ought to be labelled because they can be pharmacologically active and could even make some folks sick. Critics counter that cannabis labels in most jurisdictions are already overcrowded and that terpene research is too nascent for reliable information about what exactly they do. After all, they argue, terpenes are common in the plant world (often called “essential oils” in other industries) and don’t require alerts when added to products such as lotions or perfumes. It’s a debate that is gaining steam in the wake of new research showing that the phrases most commonly used on cannabis labels, indica or sativa, are both misleading and inconsistent. Terpenes, not strain names, better describe cannabis varieties and their effects on users, according to a team of Canadian and Dutch researchers.
Pro-label camp
The group is considering adopting a voluntary guideline that cannabis manufacturers (both hemp and marijuana) label resin cannabinoid products with the amounts of certain varieties of five common terpenes in the cannabis plant:
- Limonene.
- Myrcene.
- Pinene.
- Terpinolene.
- Caryophyllene.
The suggestion would say that those terpene labels would be mandatory for medical marijuana cannabis products but optional for adult-use cannabis products.
In addition, ASTM’s proposal calls for cannabis manufacturers to add to labels:
- The origin of any terpenes that were added from non-cannabis sources, such as lemons.
- Warnings that products containing more than 10% terpenes “may potentially cause harm.”
The proposal is out for a vote to the ASTM technical committee on cannabis, a group of industry members with no deadline to settle the question. ASTM guidelines aren’t legally binding, though they commonly underpin regulations in other technical industries. Terpene labels make sense because scientists are learning how much of a role they play in cannabis’ effects, said Darwin Millard, one of the ASTM cannabis committee members and chief science officer for Final Bell Corp., a cannabis ingredients manufacturer in California. Terpenes are important because they are medically active,” he told Hemp Industry Daily. They are part of the ensemble effect and alter the physiological effects experienced by consuming cannabis products. And because of that, medicinal-use consumers need to have that extra level of information for their medical professional to give them an appropriate recommendation.”
Millard pointed out that many terpenes don’t survive extraction and are added to products later, making terpenes an added ingredient that should be communicated. Added terpenes can also get manufacturers sideways with state-level rules that require active ingredients in cannabis products to come from in-state sources, as in the case of an Oregon recall in May.
The Other side
Some terpene manufacturers say terpene labels could be used by savvy marketers and consumers, but that they shouldn’t be required. For Jason Pickle, co-founder of Volunteer Botanicals in Christiana, Tennessee, terpene labels might not add much useful information. His company converts botanical oils into powdered terpenes available for reconstituting into finished products by other manufacturers, and he said that while B2B clients need full terpene information, end consumers might not.
“It’s very difficult to label and regulate a terpene when we don’t have the full science behind them,” he said. “We’re regulating something unknown.” Pickle worried that unscrupulous manufacturers could even make unsound medical claims about certain terpene blends before understanding what the terpenes do together – somewhat like making unproven claims about the potential ensemble effect of cannabinoids when different cannabinoids work together to produce a desired effect.
“Just like the reconstitution of cannabinoids, there’s a hidden, really neat, exciting potential of what these blends can do outside of what we know about each terpene individually,” he said. “But we just don’t have a lot of data to guide us at this point.”Another concern is that testing methods for terpene content are even fuzzier than they are testing methods for cannabinoid content.
“One downside of testing for terpenes is that it is expensive to do and not necessarily accurate because they’re pretty volatile,” said Jessica Tonani, CEO of Verda Bio, a cannabis biotech company in Seattle. So, if a product sits around, if it’s heated, anything like that, the chances of (the item) still having that terpene profile may diminish.”
Next steps
Millard concedes that scientists have much to learn about terpenes and how they interact with cannabinoids and each other. For example, he pointed out that the warning about products containing 10% terpenes is mostly anecdotal. But the safest route would be to alert consumers, he argued.
“Inhaling terpenes at such a high concentration means you’re inhaling a solvent now, and that’s never good for your lungs,” he said. Tonani suggested that cannabis manufacturers should take a cue from aromatherapy industries and others and tell consumers about the effects products can have, rather than scientific measurements of terpene compounds that few understand. Consumers are looking for a specific state that they’re using cannabis for. Medical, wellness, recreational, whatever they’re using it for, they want a consistent experience,” she said.
“At the end of the day, I think that producers should try to make consistent profiles of the terpenes within their products, whatever their products are.”
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