Calgary Herald

Sundial opens flagship facility

Pot producer has big plans for Olds

- ZACH LAING zlaing@postmedia.com Twitter: @zjlaing

OLDS With dreams of turning the Olds area into the Silicon Valley of pot, cannabis producer Sundial Growers opened its flagship, 500,000-square-foot building on Wednesday — one week before recreation­al use of the drug is legalized.

Sundial CEO Torsten Kuenzlen was at the ribbon-cutting ceremony that saw locals pack into a small, top-floor room at the Olds facility, where he spoke about his aspiration­s for the company.

“We believe cannabis is a consumer-goods industry just like any other, and it doesn’t feel like that yet and it very quickly will be that,” said Kuenzlen, who hopes Sundial will have product hit Alberta shelves in December.

“When you look at the management team that we have assembled, they really are cross-functional with experience that I think really allows us to play to where the puck in the cannabis industry is going to be.

“I think it’s the beginning of a boom you’re going to see here in Olds. If everyone keeps doing what they’re doing, then this corridor will become the Silicon Valley of cannabis, and that will be an exciting opportunit­y for all of us.”

Only months into constructi­on of the highly secure facility, Sundial is already beginning to grow cannabis. Inside one of the 140 state-of-the-art cultivatio­n rooms, 4,000 cannabis plants already show signs of budding.

Down the hall, nestled into a room no bigger than a typical living room, sat another 14,000 plants early in their stages of developmen­t. Once ready, the new plants will be transferre­d to the cultivatio­n room where they begin their blooms.

Employees work to individual­ly control rooms by tweaking their humidity and temperatur­e, and control the nutrients they ’re given.

“I’m totally ecstatic about Canada being the first G7 nation to actually go forward with full legalizati­on — it’s an incredible opportunit­y and it’s great for the country,” said Gregg Wigeland, director of cultivatio­n for Sundial, adding the company is ready to mitigate supply and demand concerns.

“We’re ready for 2019 for our corporatio­n to enter the market when we are fully in operation and have a stockpile of product ready to carry the market forward. At that point in time, I think we will put a major dent into that problem.”

Once completed, the facility will be capable of producing 100-million grams of cannabis annually. Their goal, however, is to produce a quality product — as if they were a craft brewery for pot.

Teasing a future product, Wigeland said one strain they will produce in the future will be called Sweet Jesus.

“We differenti­ate ourselves in growing the highest-quality cannabis, growing it at significan­t scale,” said Kuenzlen.

“When you look across the landscape here in the industry, there are a lot of small growers that are producing good cannabis but in very small quantities. There are a couple very large companies and I would say their growing methods and some of their cultivars are probably not suited for the highest quality we are shooting for.”

 ??  ?? Torsten Kuenzlen
Torsten Kuenzlen

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