Kent lab finds illegal substances in 'majority' of CBD products

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Cola chunksImage source, Kent Scientific Studies
Image caption,

Cola chunks were one of the products that contained illegal substances, the council claimed

Tests on more than 60 CBD products found the majority contained illegal substances, a council has found.

Kent Scientific Services (KSS), a laboratory run by Kent County Council, has been carrying out testing on behalf of several local authorities.

It found 44 out of 61 samples (72%) contained one or more of the psychoactive elements of cannabis.

KSS head Mark Rolfe said: "The issue with this is that people don't know what they are consuming."

One product was tested after a member of the public consumed it and then failed a workplace drugs test, having "never touched drugs in his life".

"It was found to contain the drug for which he failed the test", Mr Rolfe said.

Novel food

Meanwhile, several samples contained "significantly less" CBD than claimed on the pack, while another two products did not claim to contain CBD but its presence was found.

Unlike other compounds found in cannabis, such as THC, CBD is legal.

It is classed as a novel food and is currently being assessed for safety by the Food Standards Agency (FSA).

The FSA has allowed about 6,000 CBD products to be marketed in the UK, pending final approval.

Linden Jack, deputy director of the FSA, said: "This survey highlights the importance of the work we are doing to bring this growing industry into compliance.

"We have asked to see the complete set of sampling results so we can work with local authorities to ensure that those CBD products that should not be on sale are removed from shelves."

Image source, KSS
Image caption,

The analysis was carried out by Kent County Council’s in-house scientific testing laboratory

KSS public analyst Jon Griffin, who led the testing, said: "CBD is the non-psychoactive element of cannabis.

"It is suggested it can have benefits including reduced anxiety, assisting with sleep and managing pain. On its own CBD is not an illegal controlled drug."

The kind of products tested so far by KSS include foods covered by the FSA list plus cosmetics and vapes, which are not covered.

They included cola chunks, marmalade, CBD oil, gummy bears, cookies, CBD drinks, vapes and muscle balm.

A Home Office spokesperson said: "Anyone using CBD products containing controlled content such as THC could be committing a range of offences including possession of a controlled drug and being concerned in the supply of a controlled drug."

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