Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Aurora Cannabis executive departs

- VANMALA SUBRAMANIA­M

Cam Battley, one of the cannabis industry’s most well-known figures and the front-facing executive of Aurora Cannabis Inc., has abruptly left his role as chief corporate officer, the company announced over the weekend.

Battley’s departure comes as Aurora faces deepening investor scrutiny over weaker-than-expected revenue and a tight cash balance.

Aurora’s stock price, which has declined a whopping 45 per cent over the past three months, fell a further 10 per cent in the first few hours of trading on Monday.

Battley, who joined Aurora in 2016 and became chief corporate officer in 2018, will still remain somewhat tied to the licensed producer in his new role on the board of Medreleaf Australia, a privately-held medical cannabis company based in Brisbane that Aurora holds a 10-per-cent stake in.

“Our roots run deep, and Cam has been an integral part of the developmen­t, growth and expansion of Aurora,” chief executive Terry Booth said in a statement.

“We are grateful for Cam’s leadership and passion over his many years with Aurora. I am sure Cam will be successful as he moves on to tackle Australia.”

Battley, along with former Canopy Growth Corp. chief executive Bruce Linton, who was fired in July from the company that he co-founded, were two of the most vocal and bullish cannabis executives, frequently participat­ing in media interviews and honing their commentary into easily digestible sound bites in the days leading up to legalizati­on and beyond.

His bullishnes­s on his company and the sector seldom wavered, despite waning investor sentiment for the industry during the past six months, and Aurora’s less-thanstella­r financial performanc­e in the past two quarters.

In a corporate update issued Monday morning, Aurora announced it would appoint Rick Savone, Canada’s former ambassador to Brazil, as senior vice-president of global government relations. Savone was also director general at Global Affairs Canada for a brief stint earlier this year.

Aurora also confirmed it had begun shipping cannabis 2.0 products to the 10 provincial regulators, although consumers are unlikely to see these products on shelves until “early January 2020 due to varied retail operations across the country,” the company cautioned.

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