Dayton Daily News

Canada runs low on marijuana three weeks following approval

- Dan Bilefsky ©2018 The New York Times

Canada is running low on legal pot three weeks after the government approved the use of recreation­al marijuana, a shortage that is sending some frustrated consumers back to the black market.

At least three provinces — Ontario, Quebec and New Brunswick — are facing a dearth of legal marijuana, and two of them have seen outlets selling cannabis temporaril­y shut down for lack of supply.

“We need more weed!” said Trevor Tobin, who teamed up with his mother to open a marijuana retailer called High North in Labrador City, Newfoundla­nd, a small mining town near the Quebec border. He said his suppliers did not grow enough plants and don’t have enough packaging equipment.

“It is the law of supply and demand,” Tobin said.

The shortage threatens to undermine a major aim of legalizati­on: to tame an illegal marijuana trade estimated at about 5.3 billion Canadian dollars annually. Angry consumers across the country say they are returning to their illegal dealers. In Montreal, several pot smokers said their illegal dealers were taking advantage of the shortage by hawking home delivery services and lowering prices.

Retailers, consumers and the producers themselves say they are exasperate­d by the shortage, which is being blamed at least partly on the unexpected explosion of demand for government-approved marijuana and the slow pace at which the federal government has licensed cannabis producers.

Of the 132 producers approved by the government to supply marijuana to retailers, 78 have received sales licenses, according to Health Canada, the government department responsibl­e for public health.

“We are building a new legal industry that wasn’t there three weeks ago, and we knew there would be problems,” said Mathieu Gaudreault, a spokesman for Quebec’s cannabis agency. He said demand had outstrippe­d supply, while licensed producers had overestima­ted their capacity.

“Producers can add more people to try and meet demand,” Gaudreault said. “But that won’t make the plants grow any faster.”

On Monday, New Brunswick became the latest province to confront a shortage as Cannabis NB, the provincial government agency charged with selling marijuana, temporaril­y closed half of its 20 stores, citing a production bottleneck. After about 20 percent of its first order was delivered, it said it was waiting for more marijuana deliveries to help plug the gap.

That followed the decision by Quebec’s provincial cannabis agency to shutter its 12 cannabis outlets three days a week until the supply can be replenishe­d.

In Ontario, some frustrated pot smokers say they have returned to their illegal dealers. The Ontario Cannabis Store, the government retailer, received 150,000 orders in its first week of business and has been struggling to keep up with soaring demand. The problems have been exacerbate­d by a postal strike.

“The government is just feeding the black market and our customers are going there,” said Tobin, the shopkeeper. “We are called High North. But legal weed is in such short supply that no one is getting high on it.”

Tobin said that after opening the store on Oct. 17, the day of legalizati­on, his entire marijuana supply sold out in four hours. Among the items flying off the shelves were a potent sativa strain that gives people a “creative and social buzz,” and prerolled joints, he said.

After waiting two weeks to get a new cannabis shipment, he said he had been forced to shutter the store for a week. He said he and his mother had invested about 100,000 Canadian dollars in the shop and were struggling to pay their bills.

His suppliers, who are licensed by the provincial government, had told him that they had underestim­ated demand. The store, which has now reopened, is trying to scrape by with the sales of parapherna­lia like bongs and rolling papers. But Tobin said it was not enough for the business to be profitable.

His mother, Brenda Tobin, added that demand for government cannabis had surpassed expectatio­ns, in part because of the novelty but also because consumers were drawn by government marijuana being strictly regulated and free from contaminan­ts found in some street marijuana.

“People know what they are getting, and they like that,” she said.

André Gagnon, a spokesman for Health Canada, which is regulating the industry, said that Oct. 17 “marked the end of nearly a century of criminal prohibitio­n of cannabis and the launch of an entirely new regulated industry in our country.”

“As with any new industry where there is considerab­le consumer demand, we expect there may be periods where inventorie­s of some products run low or, in some cases, run out,” he said in a statement.

Given that marijuana had been illegal for so long, he added, the government didn’t have a reliable benchmark to know which products would be in high demand or to be able to estimate the demand level.

Producers, for their part, say that mastering a new industry invariably means a steep learning curve.

In the run-up to legalizati­on, Aphria, a cannabis producer in Ontario, said it had been forced to dispose of 13,642 plants after a lack of qualified local labor hobbled its harvesting. Vic Neufeld, the company’s chief executive, predicted in October that there would be shortages and that the problem would improve when consumer demand was better understood.

“It’s like trying to merge a five-lane highway into a onelane country road,” he said. “It’s tough to get everything through the bottleneck on a timely basis.”

 ?? ALANA PATERSON / NEW YORK TIMES ?? Bags of cannabis sit at a dispensary Oct. 9 in Vancouver, Canada. At least three provinces are facing a dearth of legal marijuana, and two have seen outlets temporaril­y shut down for lack of supply.
ALANA PATERSON / NEW YORK TIMES Bags of cannabis sit at a dispensary Oct. 9 in Vancouver, Canada. At least three provinces are facing a dearth of legal marijuana, and two have seen outlets temporaril­y shut down for lack of supply.

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