The Denver Post

Cannabis. Recreation­al use increasing its share of state’s legal marijuana sales.

- By Judith Kohler

The recreation­al market continues to increase its share of Colorado’s legal marijuana sales, with a new report showing that 66 percent of the total pounds of marijuana flowers and 86 percent of the total units of edibles sold in 2018 were for recreation­al use.

In 2017, recreation­al use accounted for 58 percent of the total pounds and 83 percent of the units of edibles sold by marijuana businesses, according to an annual update released Monday by the Colorado Marijuana Enforcemen­t Division in the state Department of Revenue. Medical marijuana made up the rest of the sales.

The number of recreation­al marijuana business licenses increased by 3 percent while the number of medical marijuana licenses dropped 8 percent, the first decline in a couple of years, said Shannon Gray, division spokeswoma­n.

The report is the division’s fifth straight analysis of the marijuana industry. Recreation­al use was legalized in 2014, and the medical use of marijuana was approved in 2000.

“This ongoing analysis and compilatio­n of industry informatio­n helps inform the public and contribute­s to our outreach efforts to stakeholde­rs,” said Jim Burack, division director. The report’s findings include: • Marijuana plants for recreation­al use, or what the report calls adult use, accounted for 75 percent of all the plants cultivated from July to December.

• An average of 1,316 new employee licenses were issued each month in 2018. Approximat­ely 30 percent of the employee licenses that expired in 2018 were renewed.

• There were a total of 1,577 licensed recreation­al marijuana business and 1,396 licensed medical marijuana businesses at the end of 2018 — a total of 2,973. At the end of 2017, there were 1,531

medical licenses and 1,520 recreation­al licenses — a total of 3,051.

• For the third straight year, the following counties had the highest number of plants cultivated: Denver, Pueblo, El Paso and Boulder. Denver accounted for more than a half million plants each month.

Last year, Colorado’s marijuana industry hit a record $1.55 billion in sales. At the end of May, sales totaled $665.6 million.

A study published Monday in JAMA Pediatrics found that some Colorado teenagers are shifting from smoking marijuana to edibles. About 78 percent of the teens who reported using in 2017 said they usually smoked it, down from 87 percent two years earlier.

The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environmen­t participat­ed in the study.

The recreation­al use of marijuana in Colorado is illegal for anyone under 21. Gray said it’s a priority of the state to keep marijuana out of the hands of kids and teens. She said the Marijuana Enforcemen­t Division prioritize­s compliance checks to make sure businesses aren’t selling to underage customers.

The division said that 92 percent of the businesses passed the sales checks in 2018.

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