The Mercury News

1 in 5 batches of marijuana has failed laboratory testing.

First tests are in — and one in five samples shows bacteria, pesticides or other problems

- By Brooke Edwards Staggs

One in five batches of marijuana has failed laboratory testing since new state safety requiremen­ts kicked in July 1, according to data from the California Bureau of Cannabis Control.

Failures have been triggered by inaccurate labeling or contaminat­ion

from pesticides, bacteria or processing chemicals.

Those testing requiremen­ts and results have left some retailers with severely limited inventory over the past few weeks, as cultivator­s and product manufactur­ers scramble to get compliant products to market.

There was a big gap at the beginning of the month with the

supply of marijuana buds in particular, according to Nick Rinella, chief operating officer of Verdant Distributi­on, a Long Beach-based independen­t cannabis distributo­r.

The new testing requiremen­ts have also created backlogs at busy labs.

The state has licensed just 31 testing labs, most located in

Northern California, and many of them aren’t yet taking customers. As a result, Rinella said cannabis safety tests are taking between one and two weeks.

And this week the first cannabis product was recalled from store shelves because it doesn’t meet new standards regarding pesticide levels.

While that’s concerning, in the short term, industry experts believe it’s also a sign that California’s cannabis industry is maturing and starting to look like other regulated markets, such as alcohol and food.

California launched legal recreation­al marijuana sales and imposed new rules for the cannabis industry on New Years Day. But state regulators gave businesses a six-month grace period to comply with some rules, including a requiremen­t that they could only sell products that had been tested for safety by a licensed lab.

That grace period ended July 1, and the state says since then labs have tested 5,268 batches of marijuana, about 20 percent of which failed to meet state standards.

More than two thirds (68 percent) of the cannabis batches that failed in state tests did so because of inaccurate claims on the labels. Specifical­ly, labels often over-state the amount of THC — the compound in cannabis that makes people feel high — that’s actually in the cannabis, according to Bureau of Cannabis Control spokesman Alex Traverso.

While that’s not necessaril­y a safety hazard, it can lead consumers to overpay for products that aren’t as strong as advertised.

Nearly one in five of the failed tests were related to pesticides. In some cases, the cannabis tested for traces of pesticides that are totally forbidden; in others, it tested with higher levels of pesticides than the amount deemed safe by state law.

Los Angeles-based company The Bloom Brand announced Wednesday it was recalling four vaporizer cartridges with cannabis oil that doesn’t meet state standards for safe levels of the pesticide Myclobutan­il. The Bloom Brand cartridges were sold to 100 stores throughout the state between July 1-19. It’s not yet clear how the products got to market after July 1 with unsafe levels of Myclobutan­il.

“Some marijuana is testing positive for pesticides that cultivator­s never used, according to Micah Anderson, president of the Southern California Responsibl­e Growers Council, a cannabis trade group. He said product from several growers who’ve taken over former vineyards, for example, failed initial tests because the soil was contaminat­ed, with stricter limits on pesticides allowed in marijuana than in wine.

“For growers, this will definitive­ly be the biggest challenge they face,” said Cliff Yeh, co-founder of Encore Labs, a cannabis testing center in Pasadena.

There are 60-plus banned or regulated pesticides. Growers can pass the majority of the limits on the pesticide guidelines, Yeh said, but if they fail on a few the whole batch is considered a failure.

Around 6 percent of lab test failures since July 1 have been due to microbial impurities, such as mold and bacteria. Another 5 percent of failed marijuana samples have involved concentrat­ed waxes and oils that tested positive for residual solvents, such as ethanol, butane and isopropano­l. Those chemicals are used to extract THC and other active ingredient­s from marijuana plants.

Some additional marijuana testing requiremen­ts will be phased in Dec. 31.

Profit margins for most licensed cannabis companies remain thin as they struggle to make it through turbulence that comes when a gray market is fully legalized, Blatz said. But the producers that do survive are competing to see who will be the first Anheuser-Busch of cannabis.

“Because the market is still maturing, there’s not really brand loyalty yet,” he said. “But it’s coming.”

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 ?? CINDY YAMANAKA — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Dr. Raquel Keledjian, lab director, holds a marijuana strain for testing at The Werc Shop, a lab-testing facility in Monrovia.
CINDY YAMANAKA — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Dr. Raquel Keledjian, lab director, holds a marijuana strain for testing at The Werc Shop, a lab-testing facility in Monrovia.
 ?? CINDY YAMANAKA — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? A gas sample is injected into a gas chromatogr­aph mass spectromet­er, which helps identify and quantify unknown compounds in samples, at The Werc Shop in Monrovia.
CINDY YAMANAKA — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER A gas sample is injected into a gas chromatogr­aph mass spectromet­er, which helps identify and quantify unknown compounds in samples, at The Werc Shop in Monrovia.

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