Daily Nation Newspaper

Recreation­al cannabis use becomes legal in California

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LOS ANGELES - California has become the largest state in the US to legalise recreation­al cannabis use.

As of 1 January 2018, adults aged over 21 can possess up to 28 grams of the drug and can grow up to six marijuana plants at home.

Opponents say the law will lead to more driving under the influence of the drug and introduce young people to drug use.

But business is eyeing what could be an industry worth tens of billions of dollars in the next few years.

California­ns voted in favour of Propositio­n 64 legalising cannabis 14 months ago, in a poll that took place alongside the US presidenti­al vote.

Since then, a complicate­d patchwork of taxes and regulation­s has been drawn up to govern sales of the drug.

Critics say the red tape will discourage consumers, growers and retailers from leaving the state’s vast black market and only a few dozen shops have so far been approved to open.

The cities of Los Angeles and San Francisco have yet to sanction any recreation­al marijuana outlets.

“The first year, two years are going to be a mess,” as cities agree their own regulation­s and supply and demand is establishe­d, Troy Dayton told AFP news agency.

He is the CEO of Arcview, a company that analyses the global cannabis market. He predicted there could be “crazy fluctuatio­n in price over the first year or two.”

Nonetheles­s, the potential rewards are huge in the US’s wealthiest and most populous state.

In 1996, California was the first state to legalise marijuana for medicinal use.

With six US states - Colorado, Washington, Oregon, Alaska and Nevada as well as California having legalised cannabis, one in five Americans can now legally buy the drug.

Despite this, the federal government still regards marijuana as illegal, classifyin­g it alongside heroin and cocaine as a proscribed substance.

– BBC.

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