Calgary Herald

Inaccurate THC levels detected in legal pot

- BILL KAUFMANN Bkaufmann@postmedia.com

Health Canada has been flagging legal cannabis products containing incorrect amounts of THC content — up to five times more of the ingredient than advertised.

Since recreation­al legalizati­on took effect in October 2018, the federal agency has ordered 15 recalls of products due to labelling errors in levels of THC and CBD.

In one instance, a package of pre-rolled cannabis cigarettes was determined to have five times the THC content posted.

Other instances had THC levels below what was listed.

“The (federal) cannabis regulation­s require licence holders to investigat­e complaints received about the quality of cannabis and, if necessary, to take corrective measures,” Health Canada spokeswoma­n Tammy Jarbeau said in an email. “In the cases where THC or CBD content was improperly labelled, federal licence holders have chosen to voluntaril­y recall their product.”

Most of those recalls were of dried flower, though some involved cannabis oil.

One recall from February 2019 said caps that were supposed to contain non-psychoacti­ve CBD oil “may contain THC sativa caps.”

But the federal regulator said it’s generally satisfied with the industry performanc­e.

“Generally, the cannabis industry has a high overall compliance rate with the Cannabis Act and its regulation­s, and any packaging or labelling errors related to THC or CBD content have been limited relative to overall industry sales,” Jarbeau said.

Even so, a spokespers­on for Alberta-based licensed producer Aurora Cannabis said Health Canada has recently ordered changes to product labelling related to potency.

One Calgary chocolatie­r who’s preparing to market cannabis edibles said regulators have told him of Thc-level errors in such products.

Todd Pringle said he’s determined to avoid that by incorporat­ing his own testing system at his production facility in the city ’s northeast. Other producers contract out that task.

“It’s something I never, ever want to see come up because it’ll turn people off edibles and be a black mark on the industry,” said Pringle, CEO of Wabi Sabi Brands.

He said the company first tests the potency of the cannabis oil it infuses into its chocolate, then screens its sweets twice more, using a $120,000 device.

The key to that is proper mixing, which can be a challenge to the viscosity of cannabis oil, Pringle said.

“Whether it’s THC or CBD, that stability is really hard to achieve,” he said.

Health Canada says its regulation­s generally allow for a 15-percent variabilit­y in THC or CBD levels, above or below the labelled amount.

But that can rise to 25 per cent for products with lower-thc content.

Canadian producers had the advantage of learning from U.S. counterpar­ts that went before them in states such as Colorado, which embraced legalizati­on in 2014, said Denver-based cannabis industry consultant Dan Rowland.

“In the old days, you could shop around for a test until you got the result you needed,” said Rowland, who’s worked with Canadian producers and retailers.

“Our margins of error, of what was acceptable, was huge.”

That’s since evolved considerab­ly in the U.S. and was never the case in Canada, which has been governed by more stringent national regulation­s, he said.

For one, Canada’s limit of 10 mg of THC for edible packages is far lower than those in the States.

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