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	BANGKOK, Thailand -- High on hope, Americans and other foreigners have
	arrived selling satellite imagery, financial services, grow lights and
	other products to profit from Thailand's recently legalized medical
	marijuana before Thais figure out how to do it themselves.
	
	Foreigners are excitedly gathering at cannabis networking events in
	Bangkok and elsewhere in this Southeast Asian nation, spouting sales
	spiels and describing the most fantastic things since seedless joints.
	
	They are also unraveling Thailand's newly created tangle of cannabis
	laws to find loopholes and ways to squeeze money from weed.
	
	Medical marijuana became legal in 2019. Recreational use did not and
	still includes imprisonment.
	
	As a result, the current investment rush is toward niche
	infrastructure for government-controlled medical research and
	production.
	
	The Dutch are one of the new dominating suppliers of potent seeds to
	Thailand. The Netherlands has spent decades producing some of the best
	cross-bred seeds, which are now being purchased by government-approved
	Thai researchers.
	
	Dave Rockwood, who came to Thailand from Utah, said he wants his
	AgriTech Global Services' software and satellite link to help Thai
	farmers "evaluate their land to see if it is a good location and has
	good soil conditions, weather conditions, and enough skilled
	cultivators for cannabis growing, harvesting and processing cannabis
	crops."
	
	Farmers can receive printed scans created by satellites  and software,
	which produce color-coded maps and other data to reveal if their dirt
	can grow good pot.
	
	"We help analyze the land by utilizing historical satellite scans over
	the past few years with historical weather data, and run this data
	through our proprietary artificial intelligence software engine to
	determine the suitability of that land for cannabis," Mr. Rockwood
	said in an interview.
	
	"Continual plant growth monitoring weekly, with ground sensors, and
	satellite scan monitoring with advisory and crop yield forecasts,"
	could determine which strains of cannabis to grow, and what the soil's
	irrigation and fertilizer needs will be.
	
	Some sectors where foreigners can compete with Thais "include
	technology through cultivation and extraction, genetics, and lifestyle
	branding through fashion and accessories," Josh Schmidt said in an
	interview.
	
	Mr. Schmidt said he co-founded Pistil Point in Oregon and Capital Hemp
	in California, which are involved in medicinal cannabis and industrial
	hemp, and wants access to those markets in Thailand.
	
	He was upbeat during a recent cannabis exhibition in Bangkok but said,
	"Due to compliance, there was no showcasing of the actual plant or its
	derivatives in any way. It would be nice if the government helps
	organizers, through collaborations, to introduce cannabis and hemp to
	first timers."
	
	Daniel Foxman, an American managing director of Thai Freeze Dry, is
	already involved in freeze-drying herbs in and around Thailand's
	second biggest city, Chiang Mai, where he lives.
	
	His company, which also represents California-based Delta Separations,
	hopes to include marijuana grown in Thailand.
	
	"Cannabis is one of the many medicinal herbs we will process," Mr.
	Foxman said in an interview.
	
	"Thai Freeze Dry is now well along in our progress to build a factory
	complex that will include three factories -- a much larger freeze-dry
	factory, a sprouting facility, and an extraction factory.
	
	"We will sprout hemp seeds and then freeze-dry the hemp seed sprouts
	using 'cellular fraction-line' freeze-drying technology. This may
	result in a cannabis product that can be classified as a dietary
	supplement or functional food. We will freeze-dry the cannabis roots
	which have been used for centuries for pain relief."
	
	Patience and deep pockets are vital.
	
	"We do not see this as a profitable enterprise for perhaps the next
	few years. If you are looking to 'get rich quick,' I don’t think that
	the cannabis market in Thailand is your best bet," Mr. Foxman said.
	
	Networking exhibitions in English and Thai have appeared in spacious
	five-star hotel conference rooms and cramped reggae-themed hipster
	cafes, where entrepreneurs exchange name cards, boast of their
	products' uniqueness, and listen to tutorials about the fast-evolving
	scene.
	
	Bangkok-based Elevated Estate has been arranging the most popular
	networking and exhibition venues for Thai and international cannabis
	businesses, and recently attracted Mr. Schmidt, Mr. Foxman, Mr.
	Rockwood and hundreds of others.
	
	Elevated Estate's exhibitions and meetings provide "anything from
	finding information, checking fake news, learning about business
	potential, updates on cannabis law, getting assistance, hosting a
	business-to-business cannabis expo where businesses can showcase their
	products and services, as well as learn from global and local cannabis
	experts," Thai founder Chokwan "Kitty" Chopaka said in an interview.
	
	She said many cannabis-related sectors are open to foreigners, but not
	"plant touching, especially cannabis production. Thais have a very
	strong nationalistic feeling about cannabis, almost as much as land."
	
	Elevated Estate's meetings also bring in local and foreign
	cannabis-linked professionals who discuss the latest technology,
	extraction machines, medical breakthroughs, and other hot topics.
	
	Vendors who set up exhibition booths at Elevated Estate's networking
	events have included legal services, investment advisors, agricultural
	consultants and, for laid-back consumers, bong cleaners.
	
	 
