Competition Bureau recommends changing THC limits for edibles
OTTAWA — Canada’s competition watchdog is putting its weight behind some longtime cannabis industry requests, including easing restrictions on cannabis packaging and adjusting limits on how much of pot’s psychoactive component can be in edible products.
In a submission to Health Canada and a panel reviewing cannabis legislation published Friday, the Competition Bureau positioned changing tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) limits and giving pot companies more freedoms around packaging and marketing as a way to boost competition.
“The bureau believes that stronger competition in the cannabis industry would help foster innovation and benefit consumers by providing them with increased choice and quality,” it wrote in its submission.
“Importantly, these benefits would serve to further displace illicit market activity and bolster the legal cannabis industry.”
Pot producers and shops have long felt THC and packaging changes would chisel away at the market share illicit sellers have and help them reduce the hefty number of layoffs and facility closures they’ve taken in recent years.
Their calls for change have grown in recent months after Ottawa launched a review last year of the Cannabis Act, which set purchase and possession limits and established safety requirements for growing, selling and transporting the substance. When legalization legislation came into effect in 2018, it prevented cannabis products from being packaged in a way that is enticing to youths and limited THC in edibles to 10 mg per package. Illicit products often exceed the limit.
Stakeholders have told the bureau increasing the limit to 100 mg “could make edible cannabis products more appealing to consumers, especially those currently sourcing them from the illicit market.”
The bureau suggested easing restrictions on cannabis promotion, packaging and labelling would also give producers more room to innovate and help consumers make more informed purchasing decisions.