Windsor Star

Critics blast packaging rules for legal pot

The ‘overly restrictiv­e’ approach plays into hands of illicit dealers: professor

- DALE CARRUTHERS

The government’s proposed pot packaging rules don’t give cannabis companies enough freedom to market their products, handicappi­ng them against blackmarke­t competitio­n, one business professor says.

Big tobacco, meanwhile, is crying foul over the draft guidelines, saying marijuana producers are being given more leeway than their cigarette-making counterpar­ts. With recreation­al marijuana to be legalized on Oct. 17, critics are taking aim at Health Canada’s initial guidelines for packaging and branding marijuana. The rules require cannabis companies to use plain packaging, similar to cigarettes, that displays a health warning on a bright yellow background. The packages may display just one branding element — it can’t be larger than the government warning — along with the product’s name. The child-resistant packages must be opaque or translucen­t and use a single, uniform colour with a standardiz­ed font style. “They’re making the packaging overly restrictiv­e and that will have the side effect of making it harder for the legal product to compete with the illegal stuff,” said professor Michael Armstrong of the Goodman School of Business at Brock University. Putting cannabis in plain packaging sends the signal to consumers that they ’re paying for an inferior product, said Armstrong, who teaches a course on quality. “We as consumers partly judge products by their appearance,” he said. “If we see a plain label, we think that’s kind of a low-end product.” A spokesman for Canada’s largest tobacco company said there’s a huge discrepanc­y between what’s being proposed for cannabis packaging and the rules for cigarette makers.

“We’re upset on a number of fronts,” said Eric Gagnon, head of corporate and regulatory affairs at Imperial Tobacco Canada, a subsidiary of British American Tobacco. Gagnon noted cannabis companies will be allowed to put a logo on packaging, choose the format and add colour — things cigarette makers aren’t allowed. Tobacco companies have blamed strict packaging rules, in part, for fuelling the rise of contraband smokes.

“Like any other consumer good, if you remove the branding element and a way for consumers to differenti­ate between a legal and an illegal product, it’s very easy to copy a legal product,” Gagnon said. The rate of contraband cigarette use has steadily spiked across Ontario — more than one-third of all cigarettes are now bought illegally — with Southweste­rn Ontario singled out as having the highest year-over-year increase, according to research commission­ed by the Ontario Convenienc­e Stores Associatio­n, an industry umbrella group.

“The government has said publicly they want to take marijuana out of the hands of criminal organizati­ons, but they seem to be OK to give the tobacco industry to illegal trafficker­s,” Gagnon said. Armstrong said the tight restrictio­ns on marijuana packaging also limits the producers’ ability to communicat­e informatio­n about their products with customers. The labels will display quantitati­ve informatio­n on things like THC content — the psychoacti­ve compound in pot — but details about the drug ’s effects, aroma and how it was grown won’t be allowed. Canada will become the first G7 country to sell recreation­al pot on Oct. 17, when it will be sold at LCBO -run stores and an affiliated online service in Ontario. Buyers at Ontario Cannabis Store locations, where all products will be kept out of sight, will have to show identifica­tion before going into a separate part of the store to order product.

 ??  ?? Health Canada released this image displaying how recreation­al cannabis would be packaged under its proposed guidelines. Producers are not happy.
Health Canada released this image displaying how recreation­al cannabis would be packaged under its proposed guidelines. Producers are not happy.

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