Some interesting tidbits I came across reading
Cannabis for Medical Purposes
Q17. Will a separate medical cannabis system continue to exist under legalization?
Yes, as recommended by the Task Force, the cannabis for medical purposes regime will continue to exist to provide access to individuals who have the authorization of their healthcare practitioner to use cannabis for medical purposes. The Task Force also recommended that the Government monitor and evaluate patients' reasonable access to cannabis for medical purposes during the implementation of the new law, and then evaluate the medical access framework within five years of implementation of the law, which the Government intends to do.
Q10. Is the 30 gram limit for all forms of cannabis, or are there equivalencies for things such as edibles?
Throughout the proposed Cannabis Act, possession limits are expressed in terms of dried cannabis. As such, the Government of Canada has developed equivalencies for other cannabis products that can be used to identify what a possession limit would be for those products.
These limits are largely based on equivalencies established in U.S. states where cannabis is legal such as Colorado or Washington State. They specify how other products such as liquids, solids/edibles, and concentrates equate to dried cannabis.
One (1) gram of dried cannabis is equivalent to:
- 5 g of fresh cannabis,
- 15 g of edible product,
- 70 g of liquid product,
- 0.25 g of concentrates (solid or liquid), or
- 1 cannabis plant seed.
Q29. Will there be restrictions on THC concentration?
Health Canada is evaluating a number of approaches that could be used to effectively manage the concentration of THC in various cannabis products. This evaluation includes reviewing work that has been done in jurisdictions that have already legalized the use of cannabis.
It is the Government's intention to set regulatory requirements that would standardize the amount of THC that could be in a single portion of certain cannabis products (for example, how much THC could be in an edible product) and that THC amounts be clearly stated on product labels. In this way, consumers will have clear information to make decisions about consumption and the risks they are taking.
I also haven't found anything about limits to the amount of cannabis you can have at home......so it looks like there is no limit ?