The Hamilton Spectator

Business goes all-in on pot

Suddenly worth billions, Canada’s new industry will not have only winners, experts say

- IAN AUSTEN

SMITHS FALLS, ONT. — Millions of dollars worth of marijuana plants sat under lamps brighter than the noonday sun as employees of Canada’s largest cannabis business bustled about the 47 giant growing rooms of its factory, which once made Hershey chocolate bars.

Now it’s home to Tweed, whose parent company, Canopy Growth, was the first Canadian marijuana grower to debut on the New York Stock Exchange.

Valued at more than $10 billion, Canopy is worth even more than Bombardier, the Canadian manufactur­er that is one of the world’s largest makers of planes and trains, offering a stark example of this nation’s new get-rich-quick hope — the marijuana industry.

On Wednesday, Canada became only the second country in the world and the first major economy to legalize marijuana for all uses.

Companies are clamouring to join in what some are calling a green rush.

“It’s like Seagram’s back when Prohibitio­n was in place and just about to end,” said Deborah Weinstein, a lawyer in Ottawa who handled Canopy’s move onto the Toronto Stock Exchange, with the stock symbol WEED. “But it’s more than that. This has never been an industry.”

The new law limits the products that can contain cannabis; edibles, for example, will not be legal until next year.

The legislatio­n also heavily restricts advertisin­g and is laden with bureaucrat­ic rules, including licensing and inspection requiremen­ts for producers.

But companies are already lobbying for more permissive rules.

The fervour is a little reminiscen­t of the dot-com boom of the 1990s. The top 12 Canadian marijuana companies are now worth nearly $55 billion (all figures Canadian) and investors are snapping up the stock.

Profits, though, are a dream of the future. At Tweed, for example, sales last year from the medical marijuana business were just $77 million. The company lost $70 million.

Some investors may be sorry. Not every marijuana producer now taking stock markets by storm will profit and survive, many experts believe.

There are 120 businesses licensed to grow medical marijuana, which has been legal in Canada since 2001. They are now poised to serve people who simply want to get high.

In provinces where the private sector will handle retail sales, companies are scrambling for licences to open stores.

Shoppers Drug Mart, the country’s largest pharmacy chain, has taken out a medical cannabis producer licence.

Most big alcohol players appear to be sitting back for now, except for some investment­s, but analysts expect they will eventually get more involved.

Only dried cannabis, oils and seeds will go on sale this month. But the industry is dreaming up a future that will include products like cannabisla­ced candies. At a large lab at Tweed, for example, scientists are laboring away under fume hoods on marijuana drinks.

There is also an industry around the industry, already making money.

Businesses have sprung up to create the software that allows growers to track their plants and final products, as the government requires. Marijuana growers are also voracious consumers of supplies like fertilizer­s, as well as energy.

And greenhouse makers now have a customer base beyond tomato and green pepper farmers.

Beyond that, abandoned factories, like the one Tweed operates in, have suddenly become hot properties.

Even Canadian news organizati­ons have joined in. In Toronto, The Globe and Mail has hired reporters and editors to produce “Cannabis Profession­al,” a daily newsletter that will cost $2,000 a year for a subscripti­on.

David Campbell is one of those profiting from the boom.

Campbell, 50, has a background in management at companies that make machines dauntingly known as “supercriti­cal fluid botanical carbon dioxide extraction systems.” Typically they decaffeina­te coffee.

But they are also ideal for squeezing the active ingredient­s out of marijuana plants to create oil.

So in 2015, when Justin Trudeau was campaignin­g for recreation­al legalizati­on (Uruguay legalized the drug in 2013), Campbell set up Advanced Extraction Systems in Charlottet­own, P.E.I., just to serve the cannabis industry.

Campbell hasn’t looked back. The company has sold 12 systems this year, including one to a medical marijuana company in Germany. Advanced has gone from one employee, Campbell, to 14, most of them engineers.

“We feel this is just the beginning,” Campbell said. “We’re targeting California hard now.”

Statistics Canada, the census agency, estimated that last year Canadians handed over $5.7 billion for marijuana, with 90 per cent of that going to a vast black market of dealers and undergroun­d websites.

No one knows what will happen now to the illegal trade, with its greater selection and lower prices, although the government has vowed to stamp it out.

The biggest players in Canadian marijuana, including Canopy, came out of the medical marijuana system, which was greatly expanded about five years ago.

Bruce Linton, Canopy’s chief executive, acknowledg­ed that from the first days of legal medical marijuana his mind was on the day that the much larger recreation­al market would open for legitimate business.

But he, like most in the cannabis business, sees the government’s tight limits on advertisin­g and marketing as an obstacle to future profits.

The government requires that marijuana be sold in plain packages that feature large health warnings and tiny logos.

Advertisin­g is limited to what Health Canada, the federal department that regulates cannabis, calls “informatio­n-type promotion” and “brand-preference promotion” all of which must be kept away from the eyes of children.

No ads are supposed to appear until Wednesday, but several companies have jumped the gun and run advertisem­ents that bend — or possibly break — the upcoming rules.

Health Canada said in a statement that it has cautioned several of the companies.

At the same time, a steady stream of lobbyists to Ottawa has been pushing for looser marketing rules, among other things.

Federal lobbying records show that public servants, political staff members and cabinet ministers have received 583 visits or phone calls from marijuana industry lobbyists since Trudeau was sworn in as prime minister in November 2015.

That includes 92 lobbying visits alone by Brendan Kennedy, the president and chief executive of Tilray.

For much of his career Linton was involved in several tech startups in Ottawa.

When he decided just over five years ago to leave tech behind to start a marijuana business, his associates and family members had a unanimous view that it was a “very, very bad idea.” They were almost proved right.

In its early days, the company twice ran out of money, Linton said, and narrowly avoided bankruptcy only because of a last-minute infusion of cash from hard-to-find investors.

Now investors have bet billions of dollars on his vision. And Linton declared that Wednesday will be a unique moment in Canada’s history.

“The epicentre of the public policy is here, and everybody’s coming to Canada from all the other countries to see how we do it,” he said.

“Actually having home field for the first time ever in anything — this is amazing.”

 ?? IAN WILLMS ??
IAN WILLMS
 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pot is prompting investment worth billions in greenhouse­s, energy and computer systems. Above, a pot party in Toronto.
ELAINE THOMPSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pot is prompting investment worth billions in greenhouse­s, energy and computer systems. Above, a pot party in Toronto.

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