National Post

Pot supply biggest challenge, PM says

Predicts issues will be fixed in next few months

-

OTTAWA • Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is blaming pockets of resistance to the legalizati­on of marijuana for a cannabis supply shortage that has slowed the disseminat­ion of legal weed in parts of Canada.

The shortages have been most pronounced in Ontario, forcing that province to limit the number of licensed pot dispensari­es that will be opened in the spring.

Quebec has also experience­d shortfalls in supply and has reduced the hours that cannabis stores are opening their doors to customers.

In a year-end interview with The Canadian Press last week, Trudeau called the supply shortage the biggest challenge associated with the legalizati­on of cannabis.

And in an interview Monday with Montreal radio station CHOM, Trudeau predicted supply issues should be sorted out within a few months.

But the prime minister suggested the shortages of cannabis in Quebec were linked to municipal government­s and others who tried to delay the inevitable.

“There was … so much resistance to it from the local political classes, from, you know, the chattering classes,” Trudeau told radio host Terry Di Monte.

“They were caught flatfooted without enough of a supply.

“It’s going to take a little time to adjust but we’re on the right track,” Trudeau added.

Supply shortages have plagued a number of provinces in the weeks since the first legal sales were made on Oct. 17, with industry insiders warning they could persist for years, not just months.

Khurram Malik, CEO of the Toronto-based cannabis company Biome Grow Inc., last month blamed, in part, the tough regulation­s imposed by Health Canada on the country’s 132 licensed producers for the lack of adequate supply to meet demand.

He also said the federal department was taking too long to approve licences for grow-ops but added it was also taking time for cannabis producers to develop quality and compliant products.

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Nearly empty shelves greet customers at a Quebec cannabis store last week in Montreal.
RYAN REMIORZ / THE CANADIAN PRESS Nearly empty shelves greet customers at a Quebec cannabis store last week in Montreal.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada