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Anglo-French community fights Dordogne medical cannabis farm plan

A multi-national rural community in southwest France has come together to oppose plans for a medical cannabis production site in the area.

Anglo-French community fights Dordogne medical cannabis farm plan
A cannabis plant. (Photo by Cecilia SANCHEZ / AFP)

Residents in the tiny Dordogne commune of Petit Bersac, on the border with Charente, joined forces to fight plans to construct a medicinal cannabis production facility, built 70m from an EU-protected conservation area, known as a Zone Natura 2000.

On a plot of 6.2 hectares, the project is for two hermetic glass and metal greenhouses – covering 2.2 hectares of land – to cultivate plants above ground, a laboratory, a leaf-pulling workshop, a drying room, and a storage and conditioning room. 

The developer hopes to obtain one of just 10 licences to produce medical cannabis in France, under a trial scheme to legalise cannabis for medical use in France. Recreational use of cannabis remains illegal.

Cecile Willgoss, 66, who lives in the village, told The Local: “We were not informed officially until the 19th of October, and we had two months to raise objections, which we’ve done. There is a legal action against the commune and the company.”

The Association Sauvegarde de la Vallee de la Dronne was formed rapidly in response to the scheme. Within weeks, a petition had about 650 signatures, while some 60 residents attended a meeting hosted by the mayor in the town hall in mid-November. Only 15 residents, whose homes were closest to the planned development, had been invited to the gathering.

Willgoss said that the association’s main concerns were ecological: “It’s right next to a zone Natura 2000. In the initial planning document on which everything is based, the porteur de projet said that it was not that close.

“The initial project was to grow cannabis for hemp in the soil. This will all be hydroponic. The buildings will cover 3.2 hectares in concrete, plus all the other materials, and there will be quite a large circuit of roads.”

She added that irrigation was a third concern. “Their calculations for holding and using rainwater [are] inaccurate. They plan to use the drinking water network when they run out of water.”

“The carbon footprint for the construction will be huge, and that appears nowhere in the permit.

“It just seems that this is a kind of project which you shouldn’t be doing now, especially in a sensitive ecological zone. It’s not the time.”

France’s relationship with cannabis is … complicated. It has some of the toughest anti-drug laws in the European Union, and yet also has the largest number of cannabis users in Europe.

The French government finally gave the go-ahead for two-year medical trials of cannabis in October 2020. Those trials were initially extended through to March 2024. With that deadline looming, and no apparent definitive news from the study, the government has proposed an amendment granting “temporary status” to medicinal cannabis drugs for up to five years, pending possible marketing authorisation.

Meanwhile, CBD oil, made from cannabis plants, is available after France’s highest administrative court temporarily overturned a ban on the sale of cannabidiol (CBD) flowers and leaves in France.

Willgoss said that the protesters had no problem with medicinal cannabis or the growing of hemp to make CBD oil.

“I think it’s a great idea,” she said. “It clearly works to relieve pain and to calm people down.

“What I’m against is the size of this project. And the fact that it’s artificial – you can grow cannabis in the ground. It grows really well. 

“There are CBD plantations around here – they have to control their levels of THC really carefully. It works really well. This project started off as a young farmer from the village wanting to do a CBD plantation and wanting it to be official.”

Ironically, opposition to the plans has had a galvanising effect on the community.

“That’s something that’s been really nice,” Willgoss said. “It’s brought together a lot of people from different walks of life and also the different communities.

“A lot of people, local people who lived here all their lives will say, oh, you know, it’s just the English. It’s not true. I’m half English, half French. I’ve been living here on and off since I was six years old. 

“In fact, we had a meeting on Monday evening which one of the people who lived here all his life said, ‘this is really nice, I hope we keep up this kind of thing once this is done’, because it’s given him a different perspective on the people who live here. There are all sorts of different people. And it allows them to expand her horizons and perhaps drop a few of their prejudices.”

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ENVIRONMENT

The guardian angels of the source of the Seine

The river Seine, the centrepiece of the Paris Olympics opening ceremony in July, starts with a few drops of water in a mossy grotto deep in the woods of central France.

The guardian angels of the source of the Seine

And not a day goes by without Jacques and Marie-Jeanne Fournier going to check the source only a few paces from their door.

“I go there at least three times a day. It’s part of me,” 74-year-old Marie-Jeanne told AFP.

Her parents were once the guardians of the source, and now that unofficial mantle has fallen on her and husband Jacques.

Barely 60 souls live in the village of Source-Seine in the wooded hills north of Dijon.

By the time the tiny stream has reached the French capital 300 kilometres away it has become a mighty river 200 metres wide.

But some mornings barely a few damp traces are visible at the source beneath the swirling dragonflies. If you scratch about a bit in the grass, however, a small stream quickly forms.

The source — one of two spots where the river officially starts — bubbles up through the remains of an ancient Gallo-Roman temple built about 2,000 years ago, said Jacques Fournier, 73.

Celtic goddess

But you could easily miss this small out-of-the-way valley. There are few signs to direct tourists to the statue of the goddess Sequana, the Celtic deity who gave her name to the river.

In the mid-19th century Napoleon III had a grotto and cave built “where the source was captured to honour the city of Paris and Sequana,” said Marie-Jeanne Fournier.

Her parents moved into a house next to the grotto and its reclining nymph in the early 1950s when she was four years old.

Her father Paul Lamarche was later appointed its caretaker and would regularly welcome visitors. A small stone bridge over the Seine while it is still a stream is named after him.

“Like most children in the village in the 1960s,” Fournier learned to swim in a natural pool in the river just downstream from her home.

“It was part of my identity,” said Fournier, who has lived all her life close to rivers. She retired back to Source-Seine to run a guesthouse because “the Seine is a part of my parents’ legacy”.

The Olympic flame is due to be carried past the site on July 12th on its way to Paris.

The couple will be there to greet it, but as members of the Sources of the Seine Association, they are worried how long the river will continue to rise near their home.

Every year the grotto has become drier and drier as climate change hits the region, where some of France’s finest Burgundy wines are produced.

“My fear is that the (historic) source of the Seine will disappear,” said Marie-Jeanne Fournier. “Perhaps the source will be further downstream in a few years.”

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