We seem to go round in circles on this one Opal 
I agree NB didn't need a licence to grow opium poppies for the pharma industry but:
- According to Dr Craig JB told him that WHF had a licence to grow opium poppies for the pharma industry.
- If JB was lying why didn't EP pick up on this during interviews?
- There's no evidence of any history in this country of farmers growing opium poppies for the pharma industry before 2006.
- It appears from all the available evidence in the public domain that pharma company McFarlan Smith is the only UK based company to be granted a licence to extact opium from poppies grown by UK farmers. This was in 2006. How can you explain WHF growing opium poppies for a pharma company in 1985.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/MacFarlan_Smith
Don't we just Holly
In 1962, T&H Smith bought Duncan Flockhart, and then merged with along J.F Macfarlan to form Edinburgh Pharmaceuticals. In 1965 the Glaxo Group bought Edinburgh Pharmaceuticals, rebranding it
Macfarlan Smith Ltd.[1][2]
In 1958, while trying to develop dental anasthetic Lignocaine, the company had discovered the bitterest substance yet known to man, Denatonium. Developed as a denaturant for industrial alcohol, in the 1970s it was commercial marketed as Bitrex®,[7] a safety additive for household products such as liquid detergents. Tesco were the first supermarket to display the Bitrex® brand on their products.[1][2]
In 1963 the company reproduced Etorphine, in a research group led by Professor Kenneth Bentley.[8]
Etorphine (M99) is a semi-synthetic opioid possessing an analgesic potency approximately 1,000–3,000 times that of morphine.[1] It was first prepared in 1960 fromoripavine, which does not generally occur in opium poppy extract but rather
in "poppy straw" and in the related plants Papaver orientale and Papaver bracteatum.[2]
It was later reproduced in 1963 by a research group at MacFarlan Smith in Gorgie, Edinburgh, led by Professor Kenneth Bentley.[3] I believe the Macfarlan Smith Company managed to get a Licence to lawfully produce this from The Secretary of State...See Misuse of Drugs Act 1971
7Authorisation of activities otherwise unlawful under foregoing provisions(a)if it is done under and in accordance with the terms of a licence or other authority issued by the Secretary of State and in compliance with any conditions attached thereto; or
(b)if it is done in compliance with such conditions as may be prescribed. [/color]