Scottish Daily Mail

How Britain became CANNABIS PLC

A hidden greenhouse in Norfolk the size of 23 football pitches produces nearly HALF the world’s medical cannabis and as this investigat­ion reveals, it’s a disturbing insight into the corporate giants queuing to cash in on the drug’s creeping legalisati­on

- Guy Adams

ONE day last summer, residents of rural Norfolk began to complain about a strange and pungent smell wafting across the Fens just south of King’s Lynn. Likened by some to burning leaves, and others to a noxious strain of freshly mown grass, it lingered for days, causing locals to complain of nausea and headaches and eventually sparking a formal investigat­ion by the district council.

‘The issue is not limited to Fenland, with the odour being reported across Cambridges­hire and Norfolk,’ declared a council spokesman. ‘Along with Environmen­tal health teams from neighbouri­ng authoritie­s, we are continuing to search for the source of the smell.’

Soon, officers were knocking on the door of a massive greenhouse complex covering roughly 18 hectares of farmland (the size of 23 football pitches) next to the River Wissey, on the outskirts of Downham Market.

The facility, owned by British Sugar, had originally been built to cultivate tomatoes. But in recent years, the site had quietly undergone an intriguing transforma­tion.

Today, it happens to be the location of Britain’s only legal cannabis farm.

here, thanks to a special licence quietly granted by the home Office, a huge crop of marijuana was being cultivated on behalf of a British drug company called GW Pharmaceut­icals.

After harvesting, the mind-altering plants (with a potential street value of tens of millions of pounds) would be processed into one of two potentiall­y life-saving medical products: Sativex, which treats the symptoms of multiple sclerosis; and Epidiolex, which helps prevent seizures associated with two rare forms of epilepsy.

Was this the source of the noxious smell? Opinion was, and still is, divided. Some locals insisted it was. But while Fenland District Council told reporters that the smell did indeed appear to be that of cannabis, they found no evidence the British Sugar plant was responsibl­e.

A month-long investigat­ion was unable to reach any firm conclusion, although it did suggest that nearby waste disposal plants might also be to blame.

Either way, the affair highlighte­d an intriguing, but little-known fact: that this vast horticultu­ral unit, down a secluded country lane and largely shielded from view by hedgerows, is almost singlehand­edly responsibl­e for Britain’s status as the world’s largest producer of medical cannabis.

According to a 2016 UN report, we currently grow around 95 tonnes of the stuff each year, accounting for 45 per cent of global production and roughly 70 per cent of exports. And virtually all of it comes from this one, unassuming greenhouse in rural Norfolk.

To crooks, the annual crop grown on the banks of the Wissey would be worth around £800 million on the black market. And when grown legally for medical use its value turns out to be similarly astronomic­al.

YOU may not have heard of GW Pharmaceut­icals, which was founded in the late Nineties. But it now employs almost 1,000 people, largely in London and Cambridge, and is listed on the NASDAQ stock exchange with a market value of around £3 billion. Its shares have risen in value from $9 to $143 in the past five years, making multi-millionair­es of its directors in the process.

GW’s first product Sativex, a nasal spray which hit the market in 2010, has now clocked up 87,000 ‘patient years’ worth of sales. A year’s supply of Epidiolex, which was formally approved by U.S. regulators last month and will soon be launched, will cost each patient (or their health insurer) a stonking $32,500 (or about £25,000) a year.

All of which highlights an important truth: that despite its age-old associatio­n with gun-toting crooks and bleary-eyed dropouts, the Class B drug colloquial­ly known as weed is increasing­ly fuelling a lucrative blue-chip industry.

In fact, if you happen to have either a private pension or stocks and shares Isa, it’s entirely possible that a small portion of your net worth is already invested in the cannabis industry.

To blame is a global trend: the seemingly inexorable and at times highly controvers­ial drift towards the liberalisa­tion of cannabis legislatio­n. On Wednesday, Canada became the first Western country to completely legalise marijuana for recreation­al use, allowing anyone over 18 to carry up to 30g of the drug. It can now be purchased from shops, taxed at between 13 per cent and 15 per cent, in a move the government expects to raise £235 million a year in tax.

The move — which follows similar initiative­s in several U.S. states, including Colorado and California — was roundly criticised by health campaigner­s, with the editor of the Canadian Medical Associatio­n Journal branding it an ‘uncontroll­ed experiment in which the profits of cannabis producers and tax revenues are squarely pitched against the health of Canadians’.

Yet for some, it was a veritable godsend. On Toronto’s stock exchange, several dozen executives from the country’s biggest marijuana companies gathered to ring the opening bell.

Just five years ago, not one of their firms, which encompass producers, processors and suppliers of the drug, was quoted on the financial markets.

Today, major Canadian exchanges list some 43 cannabis companies, with a staggering combined market value of £21 billion. Meanwhile, in Britain next month doctors will, for the first time, be allowed to prescribe cannabisba­sed products even though they have not yet been formally licensed as medicines.

ThE new rules were introduced by home Secretary Sajid Javid following controvers­y over the case of Billy Caldwell, a 12-year-old boy with severe epilepsy who was hospitalis­ed after UK customs seized cannabis oil used to manage his condition.

So great is the expected demand, that the 18-hectare greenhouse in Norfolk is unlikely to be able to cope. On Thursday, a firm called Sativa Investment­s duly announced that it has leased a 7.5- acre site in Wiltshire, where it will build an indoor facility for growing medical marijuana ‘for the UK market’.

Sativa, a £55million firm headquarte­red in London’s Fitzrovia, is one of three British investment funds dedicated entirely to the marijuana industry to have sprung up in recent years. Their success helps explain why some 250 cannabis investors were to be found in the ballroom of the nearby May Fair hotel in London earlier this month, for the Cannabis Invest Conference, a quarterly gathering of some of the key players in the ‘green rush’ — marijuana’s so-called version of the gold rush.

Patrick Morton, who gave up a career in investment banking to start Bloom Point Capital, the event’s organiser, said the crowd contained a roughly equal mixture of four different breeds of investors: employees of large pension funds and major banks, hedge fund profession­als, staff from ‘family offices’ representi­ng ‘high net worth’ individual­s, and individual share buyers.

‘2018 is a momentous year in the

UK with the Home Office making medical cannabis a reality,’ he said. ‘It’s important not to understate how big a deal that is for us, the culminatio­n of decades of work.’

Among the speakers at the conference was Nav Dhaliwal, chief executive of wholesale company Supreme Cannabis.

‘Cannabis is an emerging global market, and our thesis is we are at the beginning of a global roll-out,’ he said. ‘We estimate that the market will be worth $180-200 billion a year over the next decade, just for medical use, and cannabis will expand beyond medical use. From pharmaceut­ical companies to alcohol to tobacco — cannabis is a threat to all of these industries.’

Cam Battley, chief corporate officer of Canadian firm Aurora Cannabis declared: ‘Make no mistake, this is going to become a large global industry. Bigger than global brewing.’ While this may sound like bravado, key figures in the brewing industry agree. Drinks giants Coca-Cola, Molson Coors and Diageo are all reported to be considerin­g launching drinks infused with cannabis products. While in August, Constellat­ion Brands, the global giant behind Corona beer, made a £3 billion investment in Canopy Growth, a marijuana producer based in Canada, where it is listed on the Toronto stock exchange under the ‘ticker name’ WEED. The extraordin­ary outlay was at least partly motivated by the expectatio­n that America will, in coming years, continue relaxing its marijuana laws. Around $60 billion a year is currently spent on cannabis products in the country, 86 per cent of which is illegal. That compares to $77 billion spent on tobacco and $120 billion on alcohol. Tom Stevenson, from fund manager Fidelity Internatio­nal’s personal investing division, recently told the Mail: ‘I think the potential for the market is absolutely enormous. In Canada, which is the only G7 country to legalise both medically and recreation­ally, the market is predicted to be bigger than the market for wine. In America, more is spent on recreation­al cannabis than ice cream.’

Among the most prominent individual­s hoping for a slice of the pie is Roger Jenkins, a colourful former Barclays banker who achieved fame in 2005 when it emerged that his annual salary was around £75 million.

The Scottish-born former boyfriend of supermodel Elle MacPherson announced in 2016 that he was backing a fund that had purchased land in California (where the drug was about to be legalised) with a view to using it to farm marijuana.

ALSO cashing in are cannabis processors. On a farm near Wrabness in Essex, a company called Canna CBD is currently running one of Britain’s biggest legal cannabis factories, turning imported plants grown in Spain into a cannabis paste used to make everything from homeopathi­c remedies to anti-ageing cosmetics.

The firm, which came into being two years ago, was founded by a Danish businessma­n called Flemming Bo Sorensen — whose wife, Nicky had taken cannabis oil while being successful­ly treated for ovarian cancer — and two British entreprene­urs, Gregory Land and Tim Acton.

Today, it employs seven full-time staff, 150 sales reps, turns over a ‘ s e v e n - f i g u r e ’ s u m a n n u a l l y, and recently financed a new £1.3 million production facility. To stay on the right side of existing laws, the firm only imports plants containing very low levels of THC, the psychoacti­ve substance in cannabis.

They are made into a paste, which Mr Land says tastes ‘like a combinatio­n of marmite, treacle and toffee apples’ and is sold to a variety of commercial buyers, including artisanal chocolate makers. He also supplies syringe-shaped dispensers of the raw product to customers who use it as a health supplement to help with everything from arthritis to anxiety.

Land estimates that there are ‘three or four’ similar sized enterprise­s in the UK, all expanding exponentia­lly.

‘This industry started out as a bedroom operation, and it’s just kicked off and expanded,’ he said.

‘There has been a noticeable uptake in the amount of people looking at buying our products because they have heard that the NHS has legalised cannabis products. It’s worked really well in our favour.’

Outside the industry, not everyone is quite so bullish.

In wider investment circles, there is talk of a ‘cannabubbl­e’ that will inevitably burst, with claims that recent months have seen indiscrimi­nate buying of shares, causing them to rise in value at an unsustaina­ble rate.

The North American Cannabis Index, which tracks marijuana stocks, has virtually trebled in the last year. Anti-drug campaigner­s, meanwhile, argue that, while they support the medical licensing of properly tested cannabis products whose effectiven­ess has been clinically proven, the relaxing of legislatio­n around marijuana may have unforeseen consequenc­es.

‘Millions of dollars are being spent hyping its medical effects,’ says David Raynes, of the National Drug Prevention Alliance. ‘We are being told it can treat everything from ingrowing toenails to cancer. It’s all got a bit ridiculous, but of course the hype is making some people very rich.’

Mr Raynes believes that recreation­al legalisati­on of the drug will have a severe effect on public health. Some 27,000 hospital admissions in the UK linked to cancer were recorded last year alone (a rise of 15 per cent from 2015). Research has also linked the use of cannabis not only to psychosis, but also in pregnant women to birth defects in newborn children.

Since Colorado legalised the drug in 2014, the number of birth defects in the state has risen considerab­ly. And a recent article in the British Medical Journal suggested that cannabis may, one day, trigger a disaster ‘much worse’ than the thalidomid­e scandal.

LUCy DAWE, of the lobby group Cannabis Skunk Sense, meanwhile argues that the pursuit of cold hard cash is leading politician­s and investors to ignore public morality.

‘Legalisati­on would be absolutely disastrous, particular­ly when we see what’s happening in Colorado,’ she says. ‘The black market has increased because it can undercut the heavily taxed legal market. Tax revenues are nothing like what people said. It would just make young people suffer.’

Behind the scenes, she fears that a well-funded pro-legalisati­on lobby, led by holier-than-thou celebritie­s and public figures such as Sir Richard Branson and Nick Clegg, is slowly and inexorably making progress towards the full legalisati­on of cannabis in the UK.

Certainly the industry has influentia­l supporters.

In April, for example, a Seattlebas­ed private equity firm called Privateer Holdings, which invests in legal cannabis, spent around £20,000 flying Tory MP Crispin Blunt (who has publicly admitted using the party drug poppers) and Labour’s Jeff Smith to Seattle for five nights on a trip designed to help them ‘understand the regulatory, licensing and economic issues around the cannabis industry in Washington State’.

Shortly after he got back, Smith, a Labour whip, wrote a piece for the Guardian headlined: ‘Why we must legalise cannabis now.’

GW Pharmaceut­icals, meanwhile, counts the Labour peer Lord Carter of Coles, and Capital Group, which employs Theresa May’s husband Philip, as shareholde­rs.

Its directors include the Tory peer Lord Waldegrave, and chairman and founder Geoffrey Guy is a Tory donor.

As for its cannabis farm in Norfolk, that was revealed in April to be the responsibi­lity of a man called Paul Kenward. Not only is he managing director of British Sugar, he also happens to be married to Victoria Atkins, a junior minister in the Home Office, which of course oversees our nation’s drug laws.

As a result of this potential conflict of interests, Mrs Atkins has ‘voluntaril­y recused herself’ from speaking about cannabis policy.

Meanwhile, Britain’s biggest cannabis factory has carried on churning out its lucrative product.

So it goes that the one odour that is certainly emanating from this corner of Norfolk — and across this fast-growing but increasing­ly controvers­ial industry — is the heady smell of serious money being made.

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 ??  ?? Yielding a fortune: Some of GW Pharmaceut­icals’ cannabis crop and (top left) the vast greenhouse complex where the plants are grown in Norfolk
Yielding a fortune: Some of GW Pharmaceut­icals’ cannabis crop and (top left) the vast greenhouse complex where the plants are grown in Norfolk

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