National Post (National Edition)

Labatt parent teams up with Tilray

- Vanmala Subramania­m

TORONTO • AB Inbev ,one of the world’s largest brewers, is partnering with cannabis producer Tilray Inc. to research the production of THC and Cbd-infused non-alcoholic beverages, in a move that marks the entrance of another alcohol giant into Canada’s rapidly evolving cannabis space.

The partnershi­p will see both AB Inbev’s Canadian subsidiary Labatt Breweries Canada and Tilray’s adult-use subsidiary High Park Company invest up to US$50 million each into a research program that will be based out of London, Ont., where both Labatt and High Park have operations.

“It’s still early days in this industry but we wanted to get focused on responsibl­e product developmen­t on the beverage side,” said Tilray’s CEO Brendan Kennedy. “We had been meeting with Labatt for about a year and they had a team that was looking at this industry and had also met with a number of other licensed producers in Canada. We seemed like the right partner for them,” he added.

The partnershi­p comes just weeks before the federal government is expected to announce draft regulation­s for the second phase of cannabis legalizati­on — set to take place in the fall of 2019 — that will likely bring edibles and concentrat­es to the Canadian recreation­al market.

IT’S HARD TO FIND A TASTY DRINK. NO ONE HAS QUITE GOT IT RIGHT YET.

“Labatt is committed to staying ahead of emerging consumer trends. We intend to develop a deeper understand­ing of non-alcohol beverages containing THC and CBD that will guide future decisions about potential commercial opportunit­ies,” said Kyle Norrington, president, Labatt Breweries of Canada, in a press release.

Labatt, and its parent company AB Inbev, is the third alcohol company to officially enter the cannabis industry in some capacity. Last fall, Constellat­ion Brands stumped a $5-billion investment in Canopy Growth Corp., expanding its presence in Canada’s largest cannabis producer. Around the same time, Molson Coors Canada announced a joint venture to develop cannabis-infused beverages with Quebec-based Hexo Corp.

As to whether the partnershi­p could potentiall­y evolve into a larger investment by the brewery in Tilray, Kennedy was keen to make it clear that he was not interested in being bought out.

“We are not interested in being acquired. Altria and Constellat­ion effectivel­y bought Canadian LPS — we don’t want to give up control over our own destiny,” he said, in reference to another recent deal that saw tobacco company Altria buying a 45-per-cent stake in cannabis producer Cronos Group.

He did however, allude to Tilray’s pattern of relationsh­ips with companies outside the cannabis space, suggesting something similar might follow. “Last March we announced an alliance with Sandoz, and then yesterday we expanded to a global agreement with them. That’s how we like to operate at Tilray.”

Tilray’s shares were up almost 20 per cent on Tuesday after the company announced an expansion of its January 2018 agreement to develop medical products with Novartis Pharmaceut­ical’s Sandoz AG.

The cannabis-infused drinks market could be worth up to $600 million in the U.S. alone by 2022, according to analysts at investment firm Canaccord Genuity, in a September 2018 note. Canaccord’s Bobby Burleson predicted that beverages with CBD or THC could capture about 20 per cent of the U.S. market for all edible pot products in the next four years.

But developing an appealing, consistent, cannabis-infused beverage is no easy task. Issues such as water solubility, distributi­ng cannabis molecules evenly throughout the drink and regulating the time it takes to feel the effect of the drug are all problems companies in the space seem to be grappling with, according to Kennedy.

“It’s hard to find a tasty drink. Cannabis drinks available on certain U.S. markets as well as samples on the illegal market here in Canada indicate that no one has quite got it right yet,” he told Financial Post.

Kennedy says Tilray has been researchin­g cannabis drink for “almost four years” now, and the joint partnershi­p with Labatt will enable the accelerati­on of that research.

For now, the partnershi­p is limited to Canada, and decisions regarding the commercial­ization of beverages will be made in the “near future,” both Labatt and Tilray confirmed.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS IMAGES / LABATT BREWERIES OF CANADA ?? Labatt intends to “develop a deeper understand­ing of non-alcohol beverages containing THC and CBD that will guide future decisions about potential commercial opportunit­ies,” company president Kyle Norrington says.
THE CANADIAN PRESS IMAGES / LABATT BREWERIES OF CANADA Labatt intends to “develop a deeper understand­ing of non-alcohol beverages containing THC and CBD that will guide future decisions about potential commercial opportunit­ies,” company president Kyle Norrington says.

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