The Prince George Citizen

Legal cannabis retailers facing supply shortfall

- Armina LIGAYA

TORONTO — Demand for newly legal pot appears to be outstrippi­ng supply on the second day of legalizati­on as retailers ran low on some products or were cleaned out completely, manifestat­ions of a shortfall that some provinces warned could last for months.

Manitoba Liquor & Lotteries said Thursday that it is expecting product shortages in both brick-andmortar and online stores could last “up to at least six months.”

“Every province – not just Manitoba – is receiving substantia­lly less cannabis than originally requested... Retailers in Manitoba will be receiving staggered shipments over the next few weeks (some daily) in an effort to meet their requests,” said a spokeswoma­n for the Manitoba crown corporatio­n in an email.

A B.C. Liquor Distributi­on Branch spokeswoma­n said that “shortages are/were expected to impact all jurisdicti­ons across Canada as some (licensed producers) look to opportunit­ies in overseas markets.”

Four of the largest licensed producers indicated to B.C. earlier this month they would not ship their full product commitment in time for the launch of online sales and the province’s lone store, she added.

“LPs point to a number of factors in reduced product volume and assortment including issues with supply chain, lower than expected crop yields, and insufficie­nt supply of packaging materials,” the spokeswoma­n said in an email.

Retailers saw long lineups and a wave of online purchases Wednesday as Canadians rushed to make their first-ever purchase of legal recreation­al pot and witness the historic moment.

Cannabis industry players and watchers had earlier warned that there would be product shortages amid supply chain issues, but the actual appetite of Canadian consumers for legal pot was unclear until the day it became legal.

By most accounts from provinces that did provide figures, demand was high.

On the first day of legalizati­on in Canada, Quebec’s crown cannabis corporatio­n had recorded more than 12,500 in-store transactio­ns and 30,000 online orders, which “far exceeds” its expectatio­ns.

The Nova Scotia Liquor Corporatio­n said it conducted 12,810 transactio­ns totalling more than $660,000 in sales, of which almost $47,000 were online, a spokeswoma­n said. In Prince Edward Island, total sales on the first day was more than $152,000 after tax, nearly $21,000 of which was online.

In Alberta, where private retailers handle in-store sales, the government-run website processed 8,300 orders as of

3:30 p.m. local time on Wednesday, worth approximat­ely $730,000, a spokeswoma­n for the province’s gaming, liquor and cannabis commission.

The online-only Ontario Cannabis Store would not release specific numbers, but spokesman Daffyd Roderick said “the response to cannabis legalizati­on has resulted in a high volume of orders.”

Online delivery will now take as long as five days, as opposed to the earlier timeline of one to three days, due to the volume of orders in the first 24 hours, he added. Ontario Premier Doug Ford had said on Wednesday morning that OCS.ca had handled 38,000 orders since its midnight launch.

A B.C. Liquor Distributi­on Branch spokeswoma­n said it handled about 9,100 orders online in the first 24 hours and 800 transactio­ns at its brick-and-mortar store in Kamloops in the first day.

“The first day of recreation­al sales in Canada appears to have been a success highlighte­d by the long lines and enthusiasm from shoppers,” said GMP Securities analyst Martin Landry, after his research team visited retail stores in four different provinces to take the pulse of shoppers.

After surveying 100 customers, Landry and his team found that customers on average bought $80 to $90 worth of cannabis, with variations between provinces.

Eastern Canada consumers had a basket size of between $60 and $70, but in Quebec and Alberta it was $90 and $100, respective­ly, he said in a note to clients.

“Seeing cannabis shoppers wait in lines as opposed to take the traditiona­l easy illegal supply route is refreshing and bodes well for the recreation­al market in Canada,” he said.

The lines stretched into the hundreds at some retail locations across the country on Wednesday, and some provinces said they saw shorter queues on Thursday.

Still, the country-wide supply crunch continued to make it difficult for cannabis retailers to meet existing demand.

Consumers going to British Columbia’s website on Wednesday were told that several strains of marijuana were sold out and B.C.’s only retail location in Kamloops ran out of one variety of dried cannabis.

The province’s Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth said Thursday he wasn’t concerned the province would run out of legal marijuana in the first days of legalizati­on. Farnworth said new supplies will arrive as other strains of pot sell out.

“This is an agricultur­e product, so we’ll get some varieties coming in soon and others may take a little while to put in place,” he said.

“As we know the federal government has put in place additional licences, for example, and the product from those is coming on stream.”

Canopy Growth Corp. CEO Bruce Linton said the licensed producer expects by next Friday to have shipped to all provinces and territorie­s 100 per cent of the volumes it had committed to over the next 30 days.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Don and Aaron (last names withheld) from the United States show off their cannabis purchases outside British Columbia’s first legal cannabis store in Kamloops on Wednesday.
CP PHOTO Don and Aaron (last names withheld) from the United States show off their cannabis purchases outside British Columbia’s first legal cannabis store in Kamloops on Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada