Marijuana sales to be ‘unbelievable’
Canada should expect extremely high sales growth as criminals are driven out of the business
OTTAWA — A U.S. consultant hired by Ottawa to assess Canada’s eventual recreational pot market says jurisdictions that regulate cannabis should expect “unbelievably high” sales growth in the first few years as criminals are driven out of business.
Adam Orens, a founding partner of the Marijuana Policy Group, said he is not yet authorized to discuss his findings on the future Canadian pot market because his organization is under contract with Health Canada. However, a look at the group’s estimates for Colorado’s regulated cannabis industry suggests Canada can expect to generate billions of dollars per year in direct and indirect economic activity.
Colorado’s marijuana industry churned out nearly $2.4 billion US in economic activity in 2015, created 18,000 full-time jobs and pumped $121 million US in tax revenues into state coffers, Orens’ group reported in a study released last fall.
A key take-away from the Colorado research is that newly legalized pot industries should be ready for a sales jolt over the first few years as black-market transactions shift to the regulated market, Orens said.
His Denver-based firm found Colorado’s regulated marijuana sales skyrocketed 42.4 per cent between 2014 — the first year recreational pot sales were permitted — and 2015, when they totalled $996 million US.
“We’ve had unbelievably high year-overyear growth rates in sales,” Orens said, adding the group expects similar sales booms in other pot-regulating places such as Washington state, California and Oregon. “This is a conversion of an existing, informal market into a formal, regulated market and you’re going to see several years of very fast growth.”
After the initial surge, however, he noted the Colorado study predicted considerably slower sales growth under the expectation that the black market will gradually be swallowed up.
The report projected sales growth of 13.1 per cent in the state in 2020.
While every jurisdiction is different, Canada’s population is seven times larger than Colorado’s.