National Post

HOW LESOTHO BECAME A HOT SPOT FOR POT FIRMS.

- VANMALA SUBRAMANIA­M

Navdeep Dhaliwal was surprised when he first stepped foot in Lesotho last January — the climate was temperate, the landscape was lush, and the first footprints of a legal medical marijuana system were already in place.

“A close friend in the industry put me in touch with guys in Lesotho. So I went to meet with them, and I was really very surprised and impressed by the operation they had going there,” said Dhaliwal, president of Canadian licensed producer Supreme Cannabis.

So impressed, that just months later Supreme pumped $10 million into a company called Medigrow Lesotho, that country’s first legal medical cannabis producer.

The March 2018 deal gave Supreme a roughly 10 per cent stake in Medigrow, which they hope will be able to churn out “quality medical cannabis oils” that can be exported to Canada and fuel the internatio­nal cannabis supply chain — subject, of course, to regulatory approvals.

And Supreme was just the beginning. Since then, Canadian cannabis firms including giants Aphria Inc. and Canopy Growth Corp. have also struck deals in the tiny, landlocked African nation of two million, making it an unlikely hot spot in the burgeoning global cannabis market.

The way the big cannabis companies see it, Lesotho — with its low cost labour force, proximity to Europe and ideal climate — is beaming with potential.

For starters, it was the first country in Africa to offer legal licences to grow marijuana for medical purposes. And although povertystr­apped and resource-poor (as of 2016 Lesotho’s GDP was just $2.29 billion), it has a long history of growing cannabis illegally — in fact, a 1999 UNESCO report called Lesotho a “giant of the marijuana trade,” noting it supplied most of the cannabis to its more populated, richer neighbour, South Africa.

“I don’t think most people know this, but Africa as a continent is the largest producer and consumer of cannabis. If you look at their black market, it just completely dwarves the size of the global legal market by about 100 times,” said Dallas McMillan at Rhizo Sciences, a Seattle-based internatio­nal medical cannabis company that has interests throughout the southern African region.

The government of Lesotho, according to multiple investors including McMillan, is cash-strapped, hungry for new streams of legal revenue and therefore, has had no problem welcoming Canadian cannabis companies and facilitati­ng local partnershi­ps.

“Look, the government there is very pro-active, very co-operative. They are really interested in the change that is happening globally with cannabis, and they want to be part of it. So that’s obviously really attractive to investors,” McMillan said.

Canopy chief executive Bruce Linton, whose company acquired local licensed producer Daddy Cann Lesotho PTY Ltd. in May, said Lesotho’s openness to legal cannabis production made investing there an obvious option.

“Anywhere they begin to rationally govern it, why would you not want to be there?” Linton said.

“If your investment in that region, that geography, could actually make a return, then of course we’re going to be there.”

Lesotho’s geography — It has a mountainou­s landscape and is sunny, but not humid; chilly, but not too cold — is one of its other major benefits.

The climate is seen as ideal for growing cannabis, something that can also help lower costs and reduce volatility.

“It’s kind of like Colorado, but warmer,” said Hamish Sutherland, CEO of WhiteSheep Corp., a Toronto-based cannabis venture capital firm of sorts that is also scoping out southern Africa for potential investment opportunit­ies. Sutherland had just returned from a trip to Swaziland and Lesotho when he spoke to Financial Post.

“The two highest costs of growing are electricit­y and labour. In Lesotho, we can build a facility in a greenhouse where the sun is shining more than anywhere in Canada, where the exterior climate is not too challengin­g to work with. Where we can actually manage electricit­y costs. Where we even don’t have to deal with mosquitos, other pests, because the temperatur­e is cool,” Sutherland said.

If Canadian cannabis companies have their eyes on foreign pastures for cost reasons, then that is presumably wrapped up in some kind of long-term goal of producing cannabis for cheap, and shipping it to global markets.

That’s exactly the plan, McMillan believes — fuelling the European supply chain. “I see Africa as the equivalent to Europe, as South America will be to the U.S. They will be the tropical hub, so when we are short of product, they will be harvesting — Africa actually already serves a lot of European horticultu­ral markets this way.”

Sutherland, too, believes that Lesotho’s potential to become an internatio­nal supplier of medical cannabis is huge. “Canadian cannabis companies are currently operating in a high labour cost market. So they’re of course looking to identify places that they can produce products at a lower cost. We will grow there, and we will bring it back.”

But moving cannabis internatio­nally is a complex issue, requiring regulatory approval from multiple government­s, as well as compliance with internatio­nal treaties. The UN Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs of 1961, for instance, prohibits the production and supply of specific drugs, including cannabis, except under “licence for specific purposes such as medical treatment and research.”

Indeed, the internatio­nal movement of legal cannabis already takes place, but it is purely for medical purposes.

In March, Rhizo Sciences facilitate­d the first-ever shipment of medical cannabis from Africa to Canada. The 850-gram shipment arrived in Vancouver addressed to Anandia Labs, a cannabis research facility recently acquired by Aurora Cannabis.

“Africa is blessed with some natural genetics, so that’s definitely an area of interest for us,” said McMillan, who up until recently had partnered with a Lesothobas­ed cannabis producer, Medi Kingdom.

Canopy too trades cannabis, exporting a significan­t chunk of medicinal pot to Germany for instance, but that was a result of years of negotiatio­n with the health ministries of both countries.

“You can’t send it to the country and say here you go. The country has to request it. Every shipment to Germany, for instance requires Germany to ask for it and Canada to send it. So the country importing needs to be open and willing to buy,” Linton said.

He was, however, quick to refute a suggestion that there will come a day when cannabis is primarily produced in low-cost jurisdicti­ons rather than large greenhouse­s in Canada, and then shipped to market.

“No, absolutely not, there are internatio­nal barriers to that,” Linton said.

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