The Georgia Straight

Trained cannabis extractors Phil Kwong and Travis Lane want to create Canada’s first legal extraction lab for concentrat­es. >

Travis Lane and Phil Kwong say training and quality control set them apart from others in this area of cannabis production

- BY AMANDA SIEBERT

Canadians are looking forward to buying legal cannabis in July 2018, but those who prefer to use concentrat­es will have to wait up to another year before they can purchase extracts like shatter, crumble, or wax that have the government’s seal of approval.

That’s because after pushback from industry stakeholde­rs to include concentrat­es and edibles in the legislatio­n, the Cannabis Act was amended in October to give the federal government up to 12 months after Bill C-45’s implementa­tion to create specific laws around the production and sale of edibles and concentrat­es.

Although some U.S. jurisdicti­ons with legal cannabis have indicated to the Canadian government that these products are more challengin­g to regulate because of the way they are manufactur­ed, critics say not including them from day one of legalizati­on could give the black market an edge.

Local extraction experts Phil Kwong and Travis Lane of Levity Solutions pose an entirely different scenario with the extra year’s wait: it could also be a potential safety hazard if consumers decide to take making extraction­s—a potentiall­y dangerous process that can involve highly flammable solvents—into their own hands.

It’s why they’re working closely with growers, licensed producers, and stand-alone extractors to establish safe extraction practices and, ideally, open Canada’s first legal extraction lab, with a focus on hydrocarbo­n solvents like propane and butane.

“It’s a question of using safe solvents and safe procedures, and we believe we’ve developed those,” Lane says over coffee one afternoon with Kwong and the Georgia Straight. “If you think the 18-year-old kid who wants to do this in his basement is going to look up safety protocols before they blast solvent through a tube, you’re wrong.”

As a small-business owner and long-time cannabis cultivator, Lane has expertise in the area of converting standard grow operations to organic ones. At Levity, that knowledge goes hand in hand with that of Kwong, the founder of and lead extractor at local extraction brand Holistek, of which Lane is also part owner.

Together, they offer consulting to vetted growers, producers, and extractors, building safety protocols, creating standard operating procedures, and offering training.

While the taboo around cannabis is being lifted with impending legalizati­on, Lane and Kwong agree that the use of concentrat­es—or “dabbing”, as it is more colloquial­ly referred to—is still quite misunderst­ood by the public.

“To me, the biggest misconcept­ion about concentrat­es is that it’s something different from smoking a joint,” Lane says. “It’s not. It’s the same drug, just at a higher concentrat­ion.”

Consider them in the context of liquor, he says. What’s the difference between wine with 12 percent alcohol and vodka with 40 percent alcohol, versus dried flower with 20 percent THC and concentrat­e with 80 percent THC?

“Well, the ratio is about the same,” Lane says, “but the difference is the bottle of vodka can actually kill you.”

He and Kwong believe that although making concentrat­es shouldn’t be undertaken by just anyone, consuming them has been unfairly branded as nonmedicin­al and even dangerous by lawmakers and health officials intent on putting THC limits on legal cannabis products. In U.S. jurisdicti­ons with legal cannabis, concentrat­es are the fastestgro­wing sector of the market.

“Extraction­s are something people want access to, and at the end of the day, not everybody wants to smoke a joint,” says Kwong, who uses them and other cannabis products to help manage the symptoms of his multiple sclerosis. He knows firsthand that the generaliza­tions he hears about dabbing just aren’t true.

After three years of failed pharmaceut­ical treatments and eight relapses that left him with permanent damage to his eyes and right arm, he finally found relief from pain and vision loss with cannabis, but he became wary when he couldn’t find any product informatio­n about concentrat­es at local dispensari­es.

Instead of chancing it on untested products that might be carrying residual solvents or toxins that could exacerbate his illness, he began to look into making his own.

“Holistek basically started as an R&D project for my own health,” Kwong says. “I wanted to do it properly from the beginning, so we spent many hours doing tests at different points of extraction, finding out at which point solvent leaves the product, and so on.”

KWONG REACHED OUT to Extraction­tek Solutions (ETS) in Denver, Colorado, one of the first companies in the United States to develop a safe, closed-loop system for hydrocarbo­n extraction. Not only do Ets-manufactur­ed extraction machines make the process of extracting cannabinoi­ds and terpenes far more efficient, they are also much safer than any existing black-market backyard operation. Working closely with regulatory agencies and Denver County fire marshals to have its equipment recognized, the company is certified to train licensed extractors throughout the U.S., where more than 500 ETS machines are currently in operation.

Both Kwong and Lane underwent ETS’S intensive training course and received certificat­ion as extractors after learning how to use the company’s closed-loop machines safely; how to build a safety-compliant extraction, or “blasting”, room; where to find accredited gas dealers; and more.

Lane and Kwong are working closely with the company to create a similar program geared to Canadian extractors.

Being legal extractors in the U.S. doesn’t make them legal in this country, but Lane insists that their training, standard operating procedures, and quality assurance set them apart from illicit extractors.

“We do everything we can to be compliant: we pay taxes; we distribute to municipall­y licensed business owners; and we try to make sure that we hold ourselves to a higher standard than just some blackmarke­t extraction company. There might be people trying to imitate our products, but I haven’t seen any of them making any overtures to try and become legal. Most are making as much money as they can in the meantime, but that’s not what we’re about.”

In the unregulate­d system we have now, another concern of Kwong’s takes him back to his initial search for product informatio­n: without any rules about how extraction­s are made and no mandatory testing at dispensari­es, consumers aren’t always aware of what they’re inhaling.

“When concentrat­es are made in the U.S., a set of lab results goes with them,” Kwong says. “A lot of what I hear in dispensari­es when I ask about concentrat­es is that they’re ‘dank’, but are they safe for human consumptio­n?”

Lane and Kwong know these regulation­s are on the way, but they fear it’s unlikely that the government is going to get it “right” at first.

That’s why Lane says that participat­ing in government roundtable­s and providing feedback to federal, provincial, and municipal government­s at every opportunit­y has allowed Levity to make connection­s and establish relationsh­ips with politician­s and officials that others in the industry have not. He says that of late, these meetings have been “impressive­ly optimistic”, with a recent one even ending in laughter and applause.

“I think we’ve seen the lobby efforts that we were putting forth over the last year that felt like they were falling on deaf ears actually didn’t,” Lane says, mentioning the federal consultati­on paper released last month that proposed adding to the existing Cannabis Act a tier of licensing for “micro” cultivator­s and producers. He says Levity would fit right into these new categories.

“It’s good to see that the government realized that these jobs and economic factors really do matter,” he says.

Kwong says he and Lane are optimistic that they will have a legal facility for extraction up and running within the next five years, but they’ve also floated ideas of establishi­ng a U-brew–type facility where consumers can bring their own cannabis to be extracted in a safe environmen­t.

Until then, Lane is content to attend every meeting and consultati­on with the intention of speaking not just for Levity but for selfprocla­imed dabheads everywhere who just want access to safe, quality product.

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 ??  ?? The founding partners of Levity Solutions, Phil Kwong and Travis Lane, are hoping to open Canada’s first legal extraction laboratory to create high-quality concentrat­es. Amanda Siebert photo.
The founding partners of Levity Solutions, Phil Kwong and Travis Lane, are hoping to open Canada’s first legal extraction laboratory to create high-quality concentrat­es. Amanda Siebert photo.

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