With marijuana legalization measures expected to pass in 13 more states by 2025, the legal pot market would reach more than $30 billion, according to an industry report released Thursday.

The trend is bound to increase pressure on lawmakers to stake positions on one of the country’s most rapidly evolving social issues — the legalization of pot and cannabis — according to the report from New Frontier Data, a nonpartisan market research firm.

That’s partly because the industry’s “sustained and rapid growth” will send shockwaves throughout the economy, significantly affecting “mature sectors such as pharmaceuticals, tobacco, alcohol, agriculture, and even animal health,” New Frontier Data CEO Giadha Aguirre de Carcer said.

Marijuana legalization, once a third-rail issue, is already gaining mainstream support in Congress after a wave of states passed legalization measures in 2016. That’s in spite of lukewarm support from President Donald Trump and opposition from Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who in January rescinded Obama-era rules that protected states with medical cannabis laws from federal prohibition enforcement.

So far this Congress, 68 bills have been proposed that mention marijuana or cannabis, and 84 were proposed in the previous Congress, according to a CQ Roll Call analysis. The average in the previous 10 Congresses before that was 45.5. Pro-pot lawmakers even formed the bipartisan Congressional Cannabis Caucus with an initial focus on increasing medical research and revising banking and tax regulations that impede legal marijuana businesses.