HEALTH CANADA’S CANNABIS REGULATIONS LEAVE SMALL OPERATIONS BEHIND, SAYS INDUSTRY ADVOCATE

gb123

Well-Known Member
A CANNABIS “BOTTLENECK” IN CANADA COULD LIMIT CONSUMER CHOICE AT DISPENSARIES

As Canada’s cannabis industry awaits legalization, some of the growers who have been producing cannabis for years under the old “grey market” system worry that Health Canada’s regulations are leaving them behind. The current version of Health Canada’s framework could also lead to the disappearance of hundreds of existing cannabis strains due to what some experts are calling a “genetics bottleneck.”

While Health Canada has been working on laying regulatory framework since the federal government announced its intention to legalize Cannabis in 2015, it has been under a mandate from the Supreme Court of Canada to allow some sort of medical access to the substance since 2001.

In the time since, dispensaries operating in a legal grey area have been part of the fabric of major cities like Vancouver and Toronto. In the absence of a regulatory framework, these businesses have sourced their product from independent growers, giving access to a vast range of options that the Canadian cannabis market is known for.

This stands in stark contrast to the framework now enforced by Health Canada for licensed producers. Under Health Canada’s rules, licensed producers are only able to source seeds and seedlings from other producers. Only a small portion of the the genetic strains that exist in Canada are owned by the 88 currently licensed growers. The thousands of other strains are effectively off limits.

Chad Jackett is the President of Cannabis Growers of Canada, an organization that represents 16 Canadian cannabis businesses that were created under the old Marihuana Medical Access Regulations. He says that, should Health Canada’s regulations become the status quo in Canada, we could see a cannabis industry with far less variety and quality than Canadian consumers are used to.

“If the government laid off of the market and just got their thumb off the people and brought in some sort of sound regulation that worked for everybody and not just the big players, I think you’d see a diverse gene pool and a lot more diversity in the market,” says Jackett.

Jackett speculates that the groundwork being laid by Health Canada could pave the way for a market for easily patentable genetically modified plants.

“I just look at the other [agriculture] industries and it seems like there are some big players that are trying to get involved to make sure that there are all these genetically modified organisms so that they’re patented,” he says.

Advocates for the free market cannabis industry like Jackett are concerned that strict regulations will make smaller operations unviable. For example, producers are required to own at least a 25-acre parcel of land for growing. A property of that size in British Columbia costs several million dollars.

While Health Canada is planning to implement license categories for “micro-cultivation”, they will include stipulations as to who smaller growers are allowed to sell to. Jackett says that this could kill partnerships that craft growers have had for years.

“The bar is set so high in this licensed producer scheme that you have to be a multimillionaire just to get in the door,” says Jackett. “A lot of these guys aren’t that. They’re craft producers. They’re small producers.”

While Jackett recognizes the need for regulations to ensure the quality and safety of the product, he says that the regulations as they are currently written will drag down a developing market.

“I think we need something that represents more of a free and fair marketplace, something that includes small producers and doesn’t force them to change up their relationships that they’ve built up over the years and have to dramatically change everything they’ve been doing,” he says. “I think the best way that they can do this is to figure out some sort of regulatory framework that would be able to include the current British Columbia growers.”
 

TheRealDman

Well-Known Member
Under Health Canada’s rules, licensed producers are only able to source seeds and seedlings from other producers. Only a small portion of the the genetic strains that exist in Canada are owned by the 88 currently licensed growers. The thousands of other strains are effectively off limits.
Same shit...88 different suppliers!

Nobody is gonna throw money into a micro license to grow the same ShiTweed 2nds that everyone else has. It’s gonna be hard enough for micro’s to build their brands as it is.
 

CannaReview

Well-Known Member
Advocates for the free market cannabis industry like Jackett are concerned that strict regulations will make smaller operations unviable. For example, producers are required to own at least a 25-acre parcel of land for growing. A property of that size in British Columbia costs several million dollars.
Wasn't aware that its suppose to be cheap to set up a business. Should I cry that I don't have the money to buy a Tim Hortons franchise and that there's too many requirements?
 

itsmehigh

Well-Known Member
For $1mil you could start up a $2.8mil a year business, selling 1800lbs @$3.57 per gram.

That’s not too shabby.

Itsme.
 

HotKarl2

Well-Known Member
If I was to write a science fiction novel...like...fuck I had the whole story and everything but then I was so high I fucking forgot what the fuck was going on. That's why I don't write science fiction. Don't fucking bother me for a story, I'm too high. Fuck make that your story..malfunctioning human got too high etc. fuck. fuck fuck fuck. Everything is normal. Input does not equal output.. Fuck. Peoples input. CAnnabis.
Squish.
Peoples.
 

The Hippy

Well-Known Member
If I had to sell it to the Lp system and essentially be their boy...no thanks. I can't picture them being of much help that way.
So if you grow Bubba Kush for instance and 25 other micro producers are as well, who's get bought? What kind of shady deals will happen around the wholesaling of the weed from these growers?
Who's get bought ? The lowest price? The best quality? The farm with the biggest payola account?
I'd like to apply Sir to be a Government weed buyer or LP commercial/craft weed buyer?
Swag you ask? Yes ....me likes da swag. send it over pronto.
 

The Hippy

Well-Known Member
Exactly and what’s the retailers paying haha Oregon right now 4-700lb
Ya I sure tweed would be real generous eh..hahahaha. At their mercy...no thanks. Who needs those middlemen eh? We don't need no stinking middlemen.
Not to mention them marking up my product and making money of me for my work...fuck that. Been that slave before...never again.
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
Ya I sure tweed would be real generous eh..hahahaha. At their mercy...no thanks. Who needs those middlemen eh? We don't need no stinking middlemen.
Not to mention them marking up my product and making money of me for my work...fuck that. Been that slave before...never again.
Its always been, and will always be​

about​

GROWING YOUR OWN STONE!​
 

redi jedi

Well-Known Member
For a million dollars I can build you a great 5000sqft facility.

1800lbs based on 4x8 tables producing 5lbs six times a year.
60 tables x 5 lbs x 6 harvests = 1800

Itsme.
Including the cost of the land to build said building on?

What strain are you running to yield 5lbs from a 4x8 table?...big bud?
 
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