Windsor Star

APHRIA EYES $55M EXPANSION

Extraction centre to open markets

- DONALD MCARTHUR domcarthur@postmedia.com twitter.com/captainbyl­iner

Leamington marijuana producer Aphria is boosting production and building a $55-million extraction centre that will better enable the company to serve a rapidly expanding market for marijuana edibles and alternativ­e products like patches, dissolving strips, sprays and infused beverages. Constructi­on is expected to begin immediatel­y on a “state-ofthe-art” facility that will create jobs for about 50 new workers, most of them skilled. The facility will house two Class 1 extraction rooms capable of processing more than 200,000 kilograms of cannabis annually. The first concentrat­es are expected to be released by March of next year.

The centre will enable the company to conduct advanced research and a wide-range of cannabis extraction­s, including butane, ethanol and C02, to produce “world class cannabis concentrat­es,” including fractionat­ed distillate­s — a substance Aphria chief financial officer Carl Merton called “the foundation” of myriad products currently on the market, as well as products yet to be imagined. “That fractionat­ed distillate can be converted into hundreds of other products — powders, creams, patches, infused beverages, edibles. It represents the foundation and cornerston­e of everything else that is to come,” said Merton. “This lets us get ready for the next wave of things and the wave after that no one even knows about yet.” Aphria announced two other moves Wednesday that will increase its annual cannabis production by 30,000 kg to 255,000 kg. Aphria is spending $20 million to support “alternativ­e growing techniques” at its Diamond facility, which is expected to increase capacity by 20,000 kg, bringing the yearly haul there to 140,000 kg. As well, Aphria announced a $10-million expansion of greenhouse­s on property acquired in 2017 that is expected to boost cannabis production by an additional 10,000 kg. This $85 million expansion plan is being funded through a $225 million agreement announced Wednesday with Clarus Securities Inc., which has agreed, on behalf of a group of underwrite­rs, to purchase on a “bought deal basis” nearly 19 million common shares at $11.85 per share. Aphria shares finished trading Wednesday at $12.79, up 63 cents or 5.18 per cent.

The remaining money from the Clarus deal will be used to further Aphria’s global expansion plan and the domestic plan to expand the workforce in Essex County, said Merton.

Aphria currently has about 260 employees at its main campus and anticipate­s that number will grow to about 400 by Christmas. The company is expecting an additional 300 workers will be required for the expansion of the Aphria Diamond facility. With the 50 extraction centre workers coupled with employees in Toronto and B.C., Aphria expects it will employ more than 800 people by next year. The new extraction centre will take Aphria to the next level and enable it to produce the raw material required to make all manner of cannabis-infused products, from chocolate bars to rapid dissolve strips to tablets and eventually beverages, said company CEO Vic Neufeld.

“We need to move it to a higher level,” Neufeld said Wednesday from the Atlanta Airport before boarding a plane to Colombia, where Aphria is the supplier of medical marijuana.

“Let’s do everything on our beautiful campus in Leamington, Ontario.”

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