Calgary Herald

Largest cannabis gummy factory in Canada sets up shop in Edmonton

Dynaleo looks to secure licence to sell product on AGLC website and elsewhere

- DYLAN SHORT dshort@postmedia.com twitter.com/dylanshort_

EDMONTON Alberta’s capital region is set to be home to the largest cannabis gummy production facility in the country.

Dynaleo is set to open a 26,000-square-foot manufactur­ing plant near the Edmonton Internatio­nal Airport after it secured a processing facility permit from Health Canada.

Executive chairman Michael Krestell said the next step now is to get a licence to sell so the company can move its edible products to be sold from the Alberta Gaming, Liquor and Cannabis (AGLC) online store and other businesses.

“We’ve been very active in the facility commission­ing our equipment and so we are just in the final stages of training on that equipment. Then it’s all up and running,” said Krestell.

Speaking from Toronto, Krestell said co-operation from all levels of government, an establishe­d cannabis industry and skilled workforce were all factors in picking Edmonton as the facility’s home.

There are currently 30 people working in the facility as the company prepares the building and starts processing. Krestell said he expects a total of 75 jobs will be created during peak production.

“We are solely focused on edibles and we’re doing edibles on an industrial scale, which is something that everybody else in cannabis, or specifical­ly in gummy production in Canada, is unable to do now,” said Krestell. “Some market estimates are pointing to a gap between industrial supply and consumer demand of approximat­ely 80 million packaged units a year.”

Krestell said his company is now getting ready to fill that multimilli­on-dollar gap.

The facility will join an area of the country that is already rich in cannabis infrastruc­ture. Aurora Cannabis, one of the largest retailers of legal weed in the country, has an 800,000-square-foot production facility.

Aurora however announced earlier this week it is laying off large portions of its workforce and closing five facilities amid the

COVID-19 pandemic.

In the city of Edmonton, Token Naturals announced last November it had secured a long-term lease on an 8,300-square-foot extraction facility in a 60,000-square-foot industrial lot, with the hopes of constructi­ng an operation with the ability to process up to 65,000 kilograms of dried flower into cannabis extract each year.

In the early days of legalizati­on, Alberta was home to 36 per cent of the country’s cannabis retailers.

The Alberta Gaming, Liquor and Cannabis website shows there are 486 licensed retailers in the province.

 ?? ED KAISER ?? A tray of cannabis gummies sits at the Dynaleo plant in Edmonton. At peak production, the plant will employ approximat­ely 75 people.
ED KAISER A tray of cannabis gummies sits at the Dynaleo plant in Edmonton. At peak production, the plant will employ approximat­ely 75 people.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada