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Bipartisan HEMP Act Aims to Create FDA Framework for Hemp-Derived Products

House of Representatives
On January 22, 2026, U.S. Representatives Morgan Griffith (R-VA) and Marc Veasey (D-TX) introduced the Hemp Enforcement, Modernization, and Protection (HEMP) Act, bipartisan legislation designed to establish the first federal regulatory pathway for hemp-derived products intended for human use under the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

Under current law, the absence of a clear federal regulatory framework has left the market for hemp-derived products — including cannabidiol (CBD) formulations — in a state of legal uncertainty, with states adopting varied and sometimes conflicting regulations. The HEMP Act would create national oversight and regulatory clarity, replacing this inconsistent patchwork with a unified science-based approach.

Key Elements of the HEMP Act

While detailed legislative text is still evolving, the HEMP Act’s primary provisions include:

  • Establishing a federal regulatory framework under FDA for hemp-derived products, including CBD products.
  • Addressing longstanding regulatory gaps that have left states to develop divergent standards.
  • Distinguishing hemp-derived products from cannabis, explicitly keeping the framework separate from cannabis regulation.

Though this legislation marks a pivotal first step toward federal oversight, stakeholders note that further refinement and negotiation will be required as the bill moves through the legislative process.

Why This Matters

With regulatory uncertainty continuing to challenge businesses, farmers, and consumers alike, the HEMP Act aims to replace decades of ambiguous federal policy with a consistent regulatory approach for products derived from hemp. For manufacturers and marketers of CBD and related products, this framework — if enacted — could offer long-awaited clarity in labeling, safety, testing, and compliance expectations.

EAS will continue to monitor the progress of this bill and provide updates as details emerge and formal text becomes publicly available.

Posted in FDA and USDA Regulatory Update.