Pure Industrial (“we,” “our,” or “us”) is a Virginia-based industrial hemp materials company. This Privacy Policy explains how we collect, use, and protect information when you visit our website.
This website is informational and does not sell products directly online.
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We may collect:
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We do not sell personal information.
Pure Industrial works exclusively with industrial hemp materials derived from the stalk of the hemp plant. These materials are non-psychoactive and contain no intoxicating compounds.
Information submitted through this website is used solely for industrial, agricultural, and material supply discussions.
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You may request access, correction, or deletion of personal information by contacting:
info@pureindustrial.com
We may update this Privacy Policy periodically. Changes will be posted with a revised effective date.
Cultivation begins with careful planning. The crop thrives in diverse climates and soil conditions, requiring minimal intervention compared to conventional agriculture. Within 3 to 4 months, the plants reach maturity, their stalks dense with fiber and woody core material. This rapid growth cycle means farmers can integrate hemp into existing rotations without lengthy commitments or complex infrastructure changes.
Harvest timing determines everything that follows. The stalks are cut at optimal moisture content, then left in the field to ret—a natural process where microbial activity breaks down the pectin binding fiber to the woody core. This retting period, typically 2 to 3 weeks, is where nature does much of the work. Weather patterns influence the timeline, but the result is material primed for mechanical separation.
Processing begins once the retted stalks arrive at our facility. The biomass is cleaned and prepared for decorticating equipment. This stage removes field debris and ensures consistent moisture levels, which directly impacts the efficiency of the next phase. Precision here prevents contamination and maintains material integrity throughout the pipeline.
Decortication is where the separation happens. Mechanical equipment breaks down the stalks into three distinct components: long fiber, hurd, and fines. The process is purely mechanical—no chemicals, no solvents. Long fibers emerge intact and ready for textile or insulation applications. The woody hurd, once considered waste, now feeds multiple industries. Fines are captured for animal bedding or soil amendment applications.
Final processing tailors materials to their intended use. Fiber is cleaned, dried, and sometimes baled for transport. Hurd undergoes air classification to separate it into grades suited for animal bedding, hempcrete, or industrial applications. Each product stream is tracked with precision, allowing us to capture carbon data at every transition point.
Quality control runs parallel to every stage. We collect over 70 data points every 60 seconds in the field, monitoring moisture, temperature, and material composition. This continuous measurement ensures consistency and provides the transparency required by industrial buyers. The result is material with documented properties and verified performance characteristics.
The entire process operates on a closed-loop principle. Byproducts from one stage become inputs for another. Dust and fines that would traditionally be discarded become valuable bedding material. This full utilization of the plant reduces waste and maximizes the carbon-negative impact of the crop.
From cultivation to final product, industrial hemp demonstrates efficiency at scale. The speed of growth, the mechanical simplicity of processing, and the multiple revenue streams from a single harvest create an economic model that rewards both environmental stewardship and operational excellence. This is why hemp has become central to our approach to sustainable materials.