The Telegram (St. John's)

Entreprene­urs cook up edible pot products despite legalizati­on delay

- BY LAURA KANE

Yannick Craigwell doesn’t need to guess how large the Canadian appetite will be for edible pot once it’s legal. He already knows — it’s huge.

The Vancouver entreprene­ur whips up marijuana-infused cookies, brownies and fudge that he sells online through his company Treatsandt­reats.

“Once it becomes legal, I think the only thing that’s going to change is you’re going to get the people who were raised to think ... ‘Weed is bad, it’s the devil’s lettuce,’ and they’re going to be open to trying,” he said.

“It’s not really anything to be afraid of, but we are stigmatize­d by the laws that we have on the books.”

Businesses across Canada are cooking up weed-laced goodies to prepare for their legalizati­on next year. Companies are betting on a big market and hope to avoid some of the pitfalls seen in U.S. jurisdicti­ons when edibles were legalized.

The only legal marijuana on Oct. 17 will be fresh or dried bud, oil, plants and seeds. The federal government has promised to develop regulation­s to support the sale of edibles and concentrat­es within a year and will launch consultati­ons later in 2018 and 2019.

Canada’s cautious approach stands in contrast with Colorado, which had practicall­y no restrictio­ns when pot treats hit stores in 2014. The Rocky Mountain Poison and Drug Center received 87 marijuana exposure calls about children that year, nearly doubling the previous year’s total, though no children died.

The statistic grabbed headlines and pushed the state to introduce regulation­s in 2015. Edibles must now be contained in child-resistant packages, stamped with a universal symbol and divided into servings of 10 or fewer milligrams of THC, pot’s psychoacti­ve ingredient. They also can’t be shaped like animals, fruit or people.

The dangers of edibles hit close to home last week when a young child on Vancouver Island ate pot-infused gummy bears. She was rushed to hospital in medical distress, RCMP said, but was expected to fully recover.

Health Canada is considerin­g requiring a standardiz­ed cannabis symbol on labels and banning product forms, ingredient­s and flavouring agents that appeal to kids, said spokeswoma­n Tammy Jarbeau. Previously introduced regulation­s already require marijuana to be in child-resistant packaging.

The effects of edibles take longer to be experience­d and last longer than those caused by smoking cannabis, she said, putting users at risk of overconsum­ption. And since edibles can look like normal food, there’s a risk that children and pets will accidental­ly eat them, she added.

“These two issues point to the need to control the amount of THC in edibles, as well as the need for measures to ensure that edibles are appropriat­ely packaged and labelled,” she said.

It’s illegal for anyone other than a licensed producer to sell medical pot, but Craigwell said he operates in the “grey.” He requires online buyers to agree to terms and conditions that state they need cannabis for medical reasons and he also sells his edibles in dispensari­es in Vancouver, where police have chosen not to crack down.

A standard dose of THC in Colorado is 10 mg, but Craigwell’s goodies range from 90 mg to 175 mg. He said he’s open to the government mandating a lower dose, but it should consider what customers want.

“All you’re doing is risking them going into the black market,” he said. “My business model won’t succeed if I don’t have customers.”

Craigwell advised first-timers to eat a small piece and wait to feel the effects.

“Start off with a quarter. Work your way up to a half, and then a whole,” he said.

Experts predict edibles will eat up a major chunk of the market once legal. Six out of 10 likely pot consumers will choose edibles, according to a Deloitte survey of 1,500 Canadians.

å format has less stigma than smoking, said Deloitte partner Jennifer Lee.

“We found that it was really a product category — baked goods, chocolate, candy, beverages, honey, (ice pops) — that is much more accessible,” she said.

Some companies are banking on alcohol-free cannabis beverages rising to the top of the pack.

The Coca-cola Company has reportedly been in talks with Aurora Cannabis Inc. about beverages containing a nonpsychoa­ctive pot component. Molson Coors Canada teamed up with HEXO Corp. to sell marijuana-infused drinks, while Constellat­ion Brands Inc., which makes Corona beer, invested $5 billion in Canopy Growth Corp.

Bruce Linton, Canopy’s CEO, noted it’s already common to socialize over a beverage.

“At five o’clock, do you want to meet for a gummy bear or a glass of wine?” he asked.

Canopy has developed calorie-free drinks that deliver a high within seven to 12 minutes, rather than the usual delayed onset of an edible, Linton added.

Province Brands CEO Dooma Wendschuh said his company has also created a way to speed up the onset of a high from its beers brewed from the cannabis plant.

But Wendschuh said developing a product prior to its legalizati­on has its challenges. He can’t currently taste-test the beers in this country.

“It’s been absurd,” he said. “In Canada, we can make this product ... but no one’s allowed to drink it.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Yannick Craigwell, of Treatsandt­reats, shows off some of his edible marijuana baked treats in Vancouver recently.
CP PHOTO Yannick Craigwell, of Treatsandt­reats, shows off some of his edible marijuana baked treats in Vancouver recently.

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