Whanganui Chronicle

Kiwi medicinal cannabis firm lands German export deal

- Sam Hurley

AKiwi medicinal cannabis company has struck an export partnershi­p with a German distributo­r.

Rua Bioscience, based on the East Coast, said it has secured a deal with Nimbus Health, an independen­t pharmaceut­ical wholesaler which specialise­s in importing and distributi­ng pharmaceut­ical-grade medicinal cannabis products in Germany.

Founded in 2016 as a subsidiary of Hikurangi Enterprise­s Ltd, Rua Bioscience describes itself as a global innovator in plant breeding and genetics.

It has a team of more than 20 growers, scientists and engineers who are breeding, cultivatin­g and processing cannabinoi­d-based plants to create clinically proven safe and effective medicines.

It was also the first company in New Zealand to be granted a licence to cultivate pharmaceut­ical-grade cannabis and the first to legally import high-THC seeds in 2018.

Its plants have been used for ongoing research with Rua’s local partners, including Callaghan Innovation, the University of Otago, University of Waikato, Victoria University of Wellington, Unitec Institute of Technology, ESR and Scion.

The company’s export-led growth strategy under the Medicinal Cannabis Scheme became operationa­l in April.

Rua Bioscience CEO Rob Mitchell said Germany is Europe’s most mature medicinal cannabis market and he was proud to be the first company to announce a binding export agreement from there.

“We are aiming to fulfil the first exports under the partnershi­p in the second half of 2021,” he told the Herald.

“While at this time we are not in position to confirm specific quantities or the value of the agreement, it is likely to amount to a few hundred kilograms in the first year of operation to a few thousand kilograms within three years.”

Mitchell also said the agreement means Rua Bioscience is Nimbus Health’s exclusive New Zealand supplier.

“We are creating unique cannabis medicines together to serve the patient base in Germany more efficientl­y,” he said. “This provides certainty for our production goals and signals internatio­nal confidence in our ability to produce pharmaceut­ical-grade cannabis medicines.”

Rua Bioscience chairman Trevor Burt said this partnershi­p is a key milestone in progressin­g the company’s global export strategy.

“The global medicinal cannabis market is estimated to be worth over $100 billion by 2026 and with New Zealand being just a small fraction of that, it’s crucial that we connect our cultivatio­n expertise and good horticultu­ral practices with experience­d internatio­nal suppliers who can distribute our product further afield.

“This export partnershi­p expands on our establishe­d relationsh­ips with

Our mission is to supply patients in Europe consistent­ly with the highest grade of medical

cannabis products from reliable sources in a sustainabl­e manner — and Rua is well positioned to

help us achieve this.

Linus Weber, founder, Nimbus Health leading internatio­nal cannabis researcher­s and ensures we are at the forefront of the global growth of our industry.”

Rua Bioscience, he added, had a focus on expansion internatio­nally, economic developmen­t and job creation in Taira¯whiti.

The founder and managing director of Nimbus Health, Linus Weber, said he was also excited about the deal.

“Our mission is to supply patients in Europe consistent­ly with the highest grade of medical cannabis products

from reliable sources in a sustainabl­e manner — and Rua is well positioned to help us achieve this.”

Nimbus Health, which has warehouses near Frankfurt, currently supplies pharmacies serving over a quarter of the 75,000 ongoing patients using medicinal cannabis in Germany.

New Zealanders will vote in September on a non-binding referendum over whether the recreation­al use of cannabis should become legal, based on the proposed Cannabis Legalisati­on and Control Bill.

 ??  ?? Rua Bioscience says the export deal is likely to amount to a few hundred kilograms in the first year to a few thousand kilograms within three years.
Rua Bioscience says the export deal is likely to amount to a few hundred kilograms in the first year to a few thousand kilograms within three years.

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