The Niagara Falls Review

Pot now on campuses across Canada

Eight institutio­ns obtained licences from Health Canada to cultivate cannabis for scientific use

- LIAM CASEY The Canadian Press

Marijuana, long snuck on to college and university campuses for use in bongs and joints, is now being grown legally at several academic institutio­ns across the country.

Eight academic institutio­ns have obtained licences from Health Canada to cultivate cannabis for scientific purposes, allowing them to closely study the drug that was legalized for recreation­al use in October.

Some received special licences a few months before legalizati­on and will be moving to licences with fewer restrictio­ns in the future.

The University of Guelph is one of them. Max Jones, an assistant professor in the department of agricultur­e, received cannabis plants several weeks ago after the school was granted a licence in September.

Jones said he plans to study the plant’s genetics, optimizati­on of growing conditions and the creation of a gene bank to be used by both researcher­s and breeders.

For that work, Jones has a licence that allows the school to study cannabis tissue cultures — he does not yet have a licence to grow the plant to maturity and must destroy the plants when his research is complete. The school will eventually move to a different cultivatio­n license that won’t be as restrictiv­e, he said.

“By having this on campus, we can train students more hands on,” Jones said. “We can and have done research at the companies’ facilities, but that isn’t practical because they are so faraway.”

Obtaining a cannabis cultivatio­n licence is part of the university’s shift into marijuana research, an extension of the school’s long history in horticultu­ral science. It plans to begin constructi­on in 2019 on the Guelph Centre for Cannabis Research, where it hopes to grow pot plants to maturity for further study.

“It’s an exciting time to be in the plant sciences because the cannabis industry’s funding a lot of research that most industries wouldn’t fund,” Jones said.

Jones and a small team are growing miniature plants at a secure facility on campus and focusing much of their early work on tissue cultures.

“We are growing pieces of plants or whole plants in vitro and mass producing them that way,” he said, noting that two cannabis companies, Canopy and Up Cannabis, are providing the plants and some funding for research.

Jones said some of his research will help in the mass cultivatio­n of plants.

“Because it’s in tissue culture, (the plant) comes out sterile, so they’re free of all diseases and insects,” Jones said.

“This is important in the cannabis industry because they don’t really have many pesticides to use.”

Similar applicatio­ns are seen in the potato industry, he said.

“All the potatoes are started in tissue culture, planted out, bulked up and you end up with potatoes,” he said, which helps eradicate disease and pests.

A spokeswoma­n for Health Canada said the new legal framework for cannabis “aims to encourage and facilitate research and developmen­t.”

“To support this research and developmen­t, Health Canada has improved the way that research on cannabis is authorized in Canada,” Tammy Jarbeau said.

Niagara College, which has its first batch of students in a commercial cannabis production graduate certificat­e program, obtained a licence in mid-August to grow marijuana to full maturity.

Students are learning about the complete life cycle of the plant, including harvesting and drying the bud. After their studies are complete, under the terms of its license, the college must destroy all cultivated cannabis, said Al Unwin, associate dean of environmen­t and horticultu­re at the school.

 ?? UNIVERSITY OF GUELPH THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Max Jones, an assistant professor in the department of agricultur­e at the University of Guelph, is seen in this photo. The University of Guelph is one of eight academic institutio­ns to receive a license from Health Canada to cultivate cannabis for scientific purposes.
UNIVERSITY OF GUELPH THE CANADIAN PRESS Max Jones, an assistant professor in the department of agricultur­e at the University of Guelph, is seen in this photo. The University of Guelph is one of eight academic institutio­ns to receive a license from Health Canada to cultivate cannabis for scientific purposes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada