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Bougainville Ventures Inc $BOG.ca – Canada’s Cannabis Laws And 5 Burning Questions For 2019 $CROP.ca $VP.ca NF.ca $MCOA

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:06 AM on Tuesday, January 8th, 2019
SPONSOR:  Bougainville Ventures Inc (CSE: BOG) Converting irrigated farmland to greenhouse-equipped farmland. Bougainville does not “touch the plant” and only provides agricultural infrastructure as a landlord for licensed marijuana growers. Click here for more info.
BOG:CSE

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  • 2018 was a momentous year for cannabis advocates as Canada became the second country (after Uruguay) to legalize recreational marijuana use.
  • Canadians and cannabis companies alike eagerly awaited legalization, but the rollout hasn’t been as smooth as they would have liked.

Andre Bourque Contributor

A marijuana law breakdown by Canadian Province, and five burning industry questions for 2019.Shopify Partners

This is the initial post in what will be a five-part series on the 5 Burning Questions for Canadian Cannabis in 2019. 

2018 was a momentous year for cannabis advocates as Canada became the second country (after Uruguay) to legalize recreational marijuana use. Canadians and cannabis companies alike eagerly awaited legalization, but the rollout hasn’t been as smooth as they would have liked.

The most pressing problem facing the country’s legal weed market is the fact that, in the majority of provinces, suppliers are unable to meet demand. According to MarketWatch, the complexity of scaling up a national legal cannabis supply chain has left many retailers with just a fraction of the promised products. In many areas, the supply shortage may last well into 2019.

Some experts say the bottleneck exists in the regulatory approval by Health Canada of Licensed Processors and Cultivators. “The cultivation and processing capacity exists, but the lack of licensing is keeping that production off the shelves,” Rob McIntyre, CFO of Salvation Botanicals Ltd., told me. His Canadian extraction and formulation company recently agreed to produce cannabis products for U.S.-based Medical Marijuana, Inc. for the Canadian market.

“Health Canada has added significant resources to attempt to shorten the approval process, but the backlog is significant,” McIntyre explained. “In the coming months, we expect to see this supply shortage ease.”

A shortage of marijuana in Canada threatens to undermine one aim of legalization: to tame an illegal trade estimated at about 5.3 billion Canadian dollars annually. Angry consumers say they are returning to their illegal dealers. https://t.co/dZQogk8xGY

— New York Times World (@nytimesworld) November 7, 2018

On the opposite end of a product shortage is strong product pricing for cannabis producers and retailers. A gram of high-quality cannabis in Vancouver, Canada, for example, sold for $752 a gram in November 2018. Meanwhile, in Portland, Oregon, where an overabundance of marijuana is begging to cross state lines, you could buy an entire ounce of similar high-quality cannabis as recently as December.

These initial gains, however short-term they may be, will help Canadian cannabis companies offset their startup costs. “This will quickly help companies recoup the costs of building expensive cultivation facilities,” said Debra Borchardt, CEO of Green Market Report, and Canadian cannabis industry expert. “Once production begins to meet demand, then the prices will fall, which is great for consumers, but will come at a cost to the producers.”

Another less obvious issue is the diversity of cannabis regulations from province-to-province. Though weed is legal everywhere in Canada, for smokers and businesses, where you are in the country will have a huge impact.

Currently, the only constants from province-to-province under the federal Cannabis Act are a possession limit of up to 30g of dried flower (or an equivalent) and a ban on consumption in vehicles. Beyond that, everything from the legal age to the rules on public consumption can be different—though the provinces all share a common goal in discouraging underage use and exposure.

Nationwide, the biggest change in 2019 is the legalization of edible sales, which will occur no later than October 17, 2019—one year after marijuana legalization. Since edibles are more appealing to children, Canadian officials are being much more circumspect about rolling these products out. As Vice points out, it is unclear how the regulations around edibles will play out, since the government hasn’t ruled exactly what it means for a product not to “appeal” to a young person.

Provincial Laws

Here’s a quick breakdown of the current laws in each province, plus news on any upcoming changes in 2019:

.@liftandco produced an easy-to-digest graphic of the new Canadian marijuana laws and retailers by province. The country’s outlets include both the government and private sectors. pic.twitter.com/CDbHa6aArJ

— Andre F Bourque ♕ (@SocialMktgFella) January 8, 2019

Alberta:

You must be 18 years old to consume, buy, possess, and grow. Public consumption laws are the same as tobacco, though you can’t smoke near children. Home cultivation is allowed (up to four plants).

Though the province originally planned for 250 licensed retail stores managed by Alberta Gaming, Liquor, and Cannabis, supply constraints mean it will be 6-18 months before the next stores open after the first 65 opened. The province also allows online sales controlled by the government.

British Columbia:

You must be 19 years old to consume, buy, possess, and grow. Public consumption laws are the same as tobacco, though you can’t smoke near children. Home cultivation is allowed (up to four plants), though they must be hidden from street view.

British Columbia has not put a cap on the number of retail locations, but the licensing process has been slow. The first store opened up in December in Vancouver. Like Alberta, British Columbia allows online sales controlled by the government.

Manitoba:

You must be 19 years old consume, buy, and possess. Public consumption is almost completely restricted. Unlike other provinces, you won’t be able to grow your own weed at home.

By the end of November 2018, only fourteen retailers had been granted licenses. The province will allow for private online and retail stores.

In 2019, the Safe and Responsible Retailing of Cannabis Act will take effect, adding on a 6 percent tax on revenues of licensed cannabis retailers as a “Social Responsibility Fee.”

New Brunswick:

You must be 19 to consume, buy, possess, and grow. You will only be allowed to consume it in a private residence. Up to four household plants are allowed, as long as they are locked and secured.

The province will have 20 government-run locations and permit government-controlled online sales. Like many other provinces, New Brunswick has seen a spate of store shutdowns due to a lack of supply.

Newfoundland and Labrador:

You must be 19 to consume, buy, possess, and grow. You will only be allowed to consume it in a private residence. You can grow up to four plants per household.

Newfoundland and Labrador have a hybrid retail model, with private retailers receiving licenses to sell products controlled by the Newfoundland and Labrador Liquor Corporation. Online sales will go through the government-controlled NLC as well.

Nova Scotia:

You must be 19 to consume, buy, possess, and grow. You will only be allowed to consume it in designated public places. You can grow up to four plants per household, as long as they’re inside.

Nova Scotia Liquor Corporation, a government-run entity, will control online and retail stores, with 12 physical locations available at launch. Similar to other provinces, Nova Scotia faced shortages throughout 2018.

Ontario:

You must be 19 years old to consume to buy, use, posses, and grow. Public consumption laws are the same as tobacco in the province, meaning many public areas—especially ones where children may be—are off limits. There’s a four plant limit per household.

On April 1, 2019, Ontario will begin allowing private retail stores, but for now the only place to get it is through retail and online stores—the aptly names Ontario Cannabis Store—controlled by the Ontario LCBO. Thus far, the rollout has been…buggy. A questionable supply chain has been plagued by mold, mislabeled products, and mites, leading many to return to the black market in the region.

Prince Edward Island:

You must be 19 to consume, buy, possess, and grow. You will only be allowed to consume it in private residences at present. You can grow up to four plants per household, as long as they’re inside and not in reach of children.

Like many other provinces, a government-run entity, the Prince Edward Island Cannabis Management Corporation, will operate retail locations and online sales. At launch, there were four licensed retail locations. Compared to other areas, PEI’s rollout has been relatively smooth.

Quebec:

You must be 18 years old to consume, buy, and possess. Public consumption follows the same rules as tobacco, with smoking at schools and universities expressly prohibited. That may all change if newly proposed laws pass in 2019 which would raise the legal age to 21 and prohibit any smoking in public. Regardless, you cannot grow plants at home.

All online and retail sales are controlled by the Société Québécoise du Cannabis (SQDC). Since pot was legalized in October, retail locations have been closed several days of the week because of the lack of supply.

Saskatchewan:

You must be 19 years old to consume, buy, possess, and grow. Public consumption is prohibited. Four household plants are allowed per household.

Unlike many other provinces, Saskatchewan will have a private distribution system. The province handed out 51 licenses prior to Oct. 17, the day sales became legal, but as of December only a handful of those stores have opened because of supply issues. Online sales are allowed through private retailers.

5 Burning Questions for 2019

2019 marks the first full year of legal cannabis in Canada. 2018 was full of excitement for legalization, plus a whole bunch of disappointment as supply issues affected many parts of the country.

As we head into the new year, these are the biggest questions Canada’s cannabis industry will need to answer.

  1. Will There Be Enough (Legal) Pot in Canada?

It would be an understatement to say that cannabis consumers were not best of buds with the country’s suppliers.

  1. What Trends Will Dominate?

For consumers, the biggest trends for the upcoming year will be the emergence of the edibles market and the expansion of CBD products.

  1. Which IPOs Will Take Flight?

Look for even more U.S.-based companies to offer IPOs in Canada’s markets—and vice versa.

  1. Does the U.S. Legalizing Hemp Jeopardize Canada’s Industry?

In December 2018, the U.S. Congress passed the Farm Bill, an omnibus bill that, among other things, legalized the cultivation of industrial hemp and allows for interstate commerce of hemp-based products for the first time in decades. Though this brings competition to hemp production in North America for the first time, Canada has decades of research and growing experience under its belt already.

  1. How Does Legal Weed Play Out on the International Stage?

As the second country to legalize recreational cannabis-use, Canadians are reveling in their newfound freedom. But it’s unclear how cannabis use will affect international relations.

For better or worse, 2019 will be a telling year for the Canadian cannabis market. Let me know what you think’s going to happen on Twitter (@SocialMktgFella).

Disclaimer: I have no financial interest or positions in the aforementioned companies. This information is for educational purposes and does not constitute financial and/or legal advice.

Andre Bourque (@SocialMktgFella) is a cannabis industry media influencer, brand executive and advisor, blockchain marketer, and cannabis columnist. He specializes in cannabis industry partnerships, distribution, and funding. Andre is the managing director of the cannabis div…MORE

Andre is a cannabis connector and the VP of Bus. Dev. for Verdantis Advisors, a full-service consulting agency.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/andrebourque/2019/01/08/canadas-cannabis-laws-by-province-and-5-burning-questions-for-2019/#1548c5dd4eb3

Bougainville Ventures (BOG:CSE) – Marijuana M&A: Altria Group Opens the Door to Major Deals $CROP.ca $VP.ca NF.ca $MCOA

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:30 AM on Monday, December 10th, 2018
SPONSOR:  Bougainville Ventures Inc (CSE: BOG) Converting irrigated farmland to greenhouse-equipped farmland. Bougainville does not “touch the plant” and only provides agricultural infrastructure as a landlord for licensed marijuana growers.
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While marijuana stocks have pulled back with the chaos of the broader markets in late 2018, we cannot forget about the countless catalysts that are still out there.

One of the major catalysts involves mergers and acquisitions.

Alcohol companies have had significant interest, for example.

Months ago, Constellation Brands increased its stake in Canopy Growth (CGC) by $4 billion.

That came just months after Constellation first took a 10% stake in Canopy to help create nonalcoholic cannabis-infused drinks and other products.

All, as sales of beer fall in the United States, brewers have begun to bet that legalization of marijuana around the globe, especially the United States, will continue to build momentum and sales of cannabis products will take off.

Molson Coors even listed legal cannabis among the biggest possible risks to its business in its annual shareholder report. Even Coca-Cola expressed some interest at one point.

Now, cigarette makers are jumping into the fray, too.



For example, shares of Cronos (CRON) rocketed higher last week on news that Altria Inc. took at 45% stake in the company for $1.8 billion.

“Investing in Cronos Group as our exclusive partner in the emerging global cannabis category represents an exciting new growth opportunity for Altria,” said Howard Willard, Altria’s CEO, as quoted by CNN.

Talks started, as the tobacco industry comes under pressure, as sales have begun to sharply decline. Just last year, cigarette smoking fell to its lowest point in history. Marijuana sales may bring back some of that lost revenue, though.

According to CNBC, “Counting both legal and black-market sales, the total demand for pot is approximately $52.5 billion, Marijuana Business Daily has reported.”

This could potentially lead to other major M&A deals in the industry following Altria and Constellation news. If nothing else, such major deals provide further evidence that the opportunities in the global marijuana industry are much more than just hype.

For Altria to invest $1.8 billion in a company isn’t small change.

We wouldn’t be shocked to see other pot stocks see further M&A interest moving forward.

Stay tuned for more on potential deals right here.

Source: https://www.chasingmarkets.com/news/15c0e6fba8d6e7/Marijuana_M%26A%3A_Altria_Group_Opens_the_Door_to_Major_Deals


Investment in Recreational #Marijuana on the Rise $BOG.ca $NBUD.ca $MCOA $AERO $CBDS $CGRW $APH.ca $GBLX $ACG $ACB $WEED.ca $HIP.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 1:58 PM on Tuesday, November 20th, 2018

 

  • Drink companies and other investors have begun making moves to profit from the cannabis industry through a series of M&A deals.
  • In Canada, the recent legislation of use of recreational cannabis use has given a boost to the adoption of the industry in North America, as well as the US midterms which saw Attorney General Jeff Sessions (opposed to legalization of cannabis) step down.

Jimmy Aki

In the United States, medical marijuana is currently legal in 30 states. Only nine states and Washington have legalized recreational marijuana for users above the age of 21 years.

Canada and America are very important for the growth of the industry as both countries currently contribute 90% of the global revenues. To take advantage of the sector, American companies have enlisted a little-known strategy known as ‘reverse merger’ to grow their operations.

Source: Shutterstock

Canadian Funds

Reverse Mergers, also known as Reverse Takeovers (RTO), are a speedy way of becoming a publicly traded company and have been on the increase due to the frenzy around the sector. They are used by private firms who acquire a publicly traded company (or a shell company), thereby becoming publicly traded without going through an Initial Public Offering (IPO).

For American firms, Canada remains a popular destination for raising capital, for an industry that is still federally illegal in the US. These firms going through this route can skip the troubles they would have faced if they had sought the traditional IPO route.

These include registration and vetting process from the Canadian Securities Administrators (Canada’s version of the SEC) and investment bankers, who will drill into the finances and barge the company with a ton of questions.

2018 has witnessed over 200 M&A deals in the cannabis sector, according to data from cannabis-focused analytical firm Virdian Capital Advisors. California based cannabis dispensary provider MedMen, whose high-end dispensaries have been compared to Apple stores, went public in May after purchasing Ladera Ventures—a Vancouver based oil and gas shell company, through an RTO.

The company also acquired PharmaCann in a $682 million stock transaction, doubling its market share overnight. MedMen’s competitor iAnthus has also been busy making deals, picking up Canadian diversified cannabis firm MPX Bioceutical in a major $640 million deal.

Entrant of Breweries

For an industry whose market cap was a little over $5 billion market in 2015, with an estimated projection expected to hit a conservative $20 billion by 2020, the market for the emerging cannabis sector can only get better.

The industry could witness an explosion when beverage companies make their long-expected entrance and replace part of their alcoholic content with cannabis. Last year, Constellation Brands, the makers of Corona beer, got into the action with a minority stake in Canadian marijuana producer Canopy Growth Corp.

Winnipeg brewery Fort Garry Brewing Co also joined forces with medical cannabis provider Delta 9 Cannabis to launch the “Legal Lager,” a beer filled with hemp seed.

According to the company’s press release at the time, the Legal Lager, which was released as “an ongoing research and development project to jointly produce a cannabis beer” that contains Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), doesn’t contain:

“cannabis or any other psychoactive agent produced from the cannabis plant.”

Source: https://www.moneymakers.com/investment-in-recreational-marijuana-on-the-rise/

Canada facing #marijuana shortage following legalization $BOG.ca $NBUD.ca $MCOA $AERO $CBDS $CGRW $APH.ca $GBLX $ACG $ACB $WEED.ca $HIP.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 1:04 PM on Friday, November 16th, 2018

Uncertainty over future cannabis supplies sparks fears that buyers may return to black market

Canada is running low on supplies of legal cannabis a month after laws allowing the recreational use of the drug kicked in.

According to a poll by the non-profit Angus Reid Institute, one in eight Canadians has used marijuana since it was legalised on 17 October. But with demand outstripping supply in the new regulated market, authorities fears some users may return to buying from illegal dealers.

Khurram Malik, CEO of Toronto-based cannabis company Biome Grow Inc, told Canada’s Global News that the shortages are the result of the government’s strict controls on marijuana, and the resulting time it takes for producers to develop a compliant product.

All private retailers are required to pass extensive background checks, and approved operators must order their cannabis through suppliers regulated by the provincial government.

“The rules here are so difficult to grow cannabis, quite frankly more difficult than anyone else in the world,” said Malik.

Even companies that stockpiled supplies of marijuana before it was legalised are now reporting shortages.

James Burns, CEO of Alcanna, an off-licence chain that sells the drug in the province of Alberta, told the BBC that the provincial supplier, the Alberta Gaming, Liquor and Cannabis Commission (AGLC), is out of stock on most cannabis products.

“It doesn’t matter how big you are, there’s just none there. If the government warehouse is empty, it’s empty. There’s nothing you can do,” he said.

Source: https://www.theweek.co.uk/cannabis/97848/canada-facing-marijuana-shortage-after-legislation

Bougainville Ventures $BOG.ca arranges $1M private placement $CROP.ca $VP.ca NF.ca $MCOA

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 12:08 PM on Wednesday, November 14th, 2018

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  • Arranged a private placement of units at a price of 20 cents per unit for gross proceeds of up to $1-million.
  • Company has made an allowance for an oversubscription of up to 100 per cent of the expected gross proceeds of $1-million

Bougainville Ventures Inc. has arranged a private placement of units at a price of 20 cents per unit for gross proceeds of up to $1-million. The company has made an allowance for an oversubscription of up to 100 per cent of the expected gross proceeds of $1-million.

Each unit comprises one common share of the company and one common share purchase warrant. Each warrant entitles the holder to purchase one additional common share of the company at an exercise price of 30 cents per warrant share for a term that is 24 months from the date of closing of the private placement.

The proceeds of the private placement will be used for general working capital.

The company wishes to correct a typo in its news release dated Oct. 31, 2018, in which it announced the closing of a previously announced private placement with gross proceeds of $308,000 and 1,232,000 units. The previously announced private placement closed with gross proceeds of $320,500 and 1,282,000 units.

About Bougainville Ventures Inc.

Bougainville provides cannabis infrastructure and seed-to-sale services to I-502 tenant-growers leasing greenhouse facilities space and providing fully built out, turnkey solutions and ancillary services including processing, cannabis expertise, and marketing and sales resources. Greenhouse canopies provide a 50-per-cent saving in cultivation cost.

We seek Safe Harbor.

Revenues at #Cannabis Startups Surge as Demand Begins to Outstrip Supply $BOG.ca $NBUD.ca $MCOA $ACG.ca $ACB $WEED.ca $HIP.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:51 AM on Wednesday, November 14th, 2018

By Kevin Kelleher

7:30 PM EST

Three of the largest cannabis companies reported earnings this week, painting a portrait of a nascent industry enjoying surging demand as recreational pot becomes legalized in more places—but they’re also encountering some growing pains.

Aurora Cannabis said Monday its revenue rose 260% to $29.7 million Canadian dollars (US$22 million). Net income came in at C$105.5 million, up from C$3.56 million a year ago, largely because of unrealized gains on securities.

On Tuesday, Tilray said revenue rose 86% to C$10 million, while its net loss increased to C$19 million from C$1.8 million a year ago, driven largely by an increase in non-cash stock-based compensation charges.

Also on Tuesday, Cronos Group said revenue in the third quarter rose 186% to C$3.8 million, compared with C$1.3 million a year ago. Cronos lost 4 Canadian cents per share.

Both Tilray and Cronos said that the average price of weed per gram declined. Tilray attributed the decline to an increase in bulk sales as a percentage of total revenue.

However, the price of cannabis could increase in the future because demand is beginning to outstrip supply as Canada and many U.S. states have legalized marijuana. Much of the cannabis sales the three companies reported last quarter came from medicinal marijuana.

“Similar to other Canadian LPs, we are facing demand that outstrips supply,” Aurora’s chief corporate officer Cam Battley said during the company’s earnings conference call. “We anticipate this dynamic to continue for some time.”

Cannabis stocks surged through most of 2018 before encountering a selloff, once pot became legal in Canada, in a classic buy-on-rumor, sell-on-news scenario. Investors appear to be remaining cautious, despite the strong revenue growth last quarter. On Tuesday, Aurora’s stock on the NYSE fell 3.7%, while TIlray fell 1.9% and Cronos fell 1.7%.

Source: http://fortune.com/2018/11/13/revenue-cannabis-startups-surges-demand-outstrip-supply/

Bougainville Ventures Inc. $BOG.ca Announces the Signing of a Definitive Agreement to Acquire 100% of the Shares of Gene Bank Research Inc. $CROP.ca $VP.ca NF.ca $MCOA

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 3:27 PM on Tuesday, November 13th, 2018

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  • Gene Bank Possesses over 110 lab-tested craft strains developed over 17 years’ from a team of breeders
  • Bougainville has signed a Definitive Agreement to acquire 100% of the shares of Gene Bank Research Inc. Gene Bank places Bougainville in a strong position to capitalize on the market opportunities created by the Cannabis Act that came into force in Canada earlier in 2018
  • Gene Bank offers a solution to bridge the gap between craft growers and licensed producers.

VANCOUVER, Nov. 13, 2018  – Bougainville Venture Inc., (CSE-BOG) (“Bougainville” or the “Company”) is pleased to announce that the Company has signed a Definitive Agreement dated November 8, 2018 further to a news release on November 1st, 2018 detailing the terms of the binding Letter of Intent.

Bougainville has signed a Definitive Agreement to acquire 100% of the shares of Gene Bank Research Inc. Gene Bank places Bougainville in a strong position to capitalize on the market opportunities created by the Cannabis Act that came into force in Canada earlier in 2018 (the “Cannabis Act”). Gene Bank offers a solution to bridge the gap between craft growers and licensed producers. Gene Bank has over 110 lab-tested craft strains developed by its team of knowledge breeders which collectively have over 17 years’ experience in the industry. Gene Bank has positioned itself to capitalize on the new market opportunities brought in by the Cannabis Act and aims to be the largest proprietary genetic strain bank in Canada.

CEO, Andy Jagpal Comments:
“The acquisition of Gene Bank greatly expands our reach into the Canadian cannabis market. Gene Bank offers a solution to bridge the gap between craft growers and licensed producers created by the new Cannabis Act. This places Bougainville in a strong position to capitalize on this new market opportunity.”

About Bougainville Ventures, Inc.  
Bougainville provides cannabis infrastructure and seed-to-sale services to I-502 tenant-growers leasing greenhouse facilities space and providing fully built-out, turnkey solutions and ancillary services including processing, cannabis expertise and marketing and sales resources. Greenhouse canopies provide a 50% saving in cultivation cost.

For more information please visit: http://bougainvilleinc.com/

On behalf of the Board of Directors
BOUGAINVILLE VENTURES INC.

Andy Jagpal, CEO and Director

FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS: This news release contains certain forward-looking statements within the meaning of Canadian securities laws. Forward-looking statements are based on estimates and assumptions made by BOG in light of its experience and perception of current and expected future developments, as well as other factors that BOG believes are appropriate in the circumstances. Many factors could cause BOG’s results, performance or achievements to differ materially from those expressed or implied by the forward looking statements, including: discrepancies between actual and estimated results from exploration and development and operating risks, dependence on early exploration stage concessions; uninsurable risks; competition; regulatory restrictions, including environmental regulatory restrictions and liability; currency fluctuations; defective title to mineral claims or property and dependence on key employees. Forward-looking statements are based on the expectations and opinions of the Company’s management on the date the statements are made. The assumptions used in the preparation of such statements, although considered reasonable at the time of preparation, may prove to be imprecise and, as such, undue reliance should not be placed on forward-looking statements. The Company expressly disclaims any intention or obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.

No regulatory authority has approved or disapproved the information contained in this news release.

SOURCE Bougainville Ventures Inc.

View original content: http://www.newswire.ca/en/releases/archive/November2018/13/c1844.html

Andy Jagpal at [email protected] or 1-877-517-7816/1-844-734-8420Copyright CNW Group 2018

#Cannabis industry says it needs more approved growers to meet Canadian demand $BOG.ca $NBUD.ca $MCOA

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:09 AM on Monday, November 12th, 2018

  • More fully-licensed cannabis growers and cultivation space are needed to meet a voracious demand for legal marijuana, a spokesman for the industry said last week.
  • That means more licences for both producers and their grow areas need to be issued by Health Canada, said Allan Rewak, executive director of the Cannabis Council of Canada.
  • “Absolutely, we need more licensed producers, we need Health Canada to approve more production sites,” said Rewak, adding his group represents 85 per cent of the legal cultivation space in Canada.

Dean Pilling/Postmedia

More fully-licensed cannabis growers and cultivation space are needed to meet a voracious demand for legal marijuana, a spokesman for the industry said last week.

That means more licences for both producers and their grow areas need to be issued by Health Canada, said Allan Rewak, executive director of the Cannabis Council of Canada.

“Absolutely, we need more licensed producers, we need Health Canada to approve more production sites,” said Rewak, adding his group represents 85 per cent of the legal cultivation space in Canada.

“We’re talking to them every day.”

Private cannabis retailers in Alberta and across the country say the supply of product is often proving inadequate, with some insisting that shortage is preventing them from opening their stores a few weeks after the drug became recreationally legal on Oct. 17.

Alberta Gaming, Liquor and Cannabis, the provincial commission that distributes to private shops and sells pot online, echoes those sentiments.

On Friday, 72 of its 90 varieties of marijuana were listed as out of stock, while the number of total varieties had fallen by 100 from the day before.

Commission officials say they’ve canvassed all licensed producers in the country for more supply, but have been told there’s none to spare.

That bottleneck can be traced back to the federal government’s pace in approving producers’ ability to market their harvests, said AGLC spokeswoman Kaleigh Miller.

“There’s a lot of producers in the hopper waiting for a federal licence to sell,” said Miller.

Health Canada lists 132 producers as licensed to cultivate — nine in Alberta — though 78 of those have sales permits, which can take months to acquire.

Alberta has signed up 15 licensed producers to supply its market, though not all are making deliveries yet.

Those suppliers have reported inventory and shipped goods that should be enough to meet market requirements, said Health Canada spokesman Andre Gagnon.

“There will remain, in aggregate, more than enough supply of dried cannabis and cannabis oils to meet Canadian legal demand,” he said in a statement.

“The challenge will continue to be for licensed processors to work with distributors and retailers to process, package existing inventory and ship final products to meet consumer demand.”

In the past 16 months, he said, 89 companies were issued production licences and 46 granted sales permits, while growing space has expanded from two million to 13 million square feet.

Earlier this year, Postmedia reported that Health Canada was rejecting three licence applications for every one it approved, over concerns some of those requesting them had been involved in the black market.

Health Canada officials have said they’ve hired 300 additional staff to assess applications.

The Cannabis Council of Canada’s Rewak said he’s confident federal officials are working diligently to break the logjam.

“They’re working hard to migrate licences, no one is working against anybody else,” he said.

He also said the industry is working round the clock to meet demand, adding supply is making it to distributors and retailers.

“We’re not out of cannabis, it’s not like shelves are bare,” he said.

Millions of square feet of production capacity is being brought on line, which should help ease or erase supply gaps, said Rewak.

“In the weeks and months to come, it will normalize . . . we won’t see a completely rationalized market until the new year,” he said.

“We’ve got some great licensed producers at the final stages of approval.”

And he agrees with Health Canada that logistical hiccups, such as those in product packaging, are a factor in supply problems.

Included among those are difficulties in quickly affixing federal excise stamps to packaging, he said.

Another challenge has been the lack of data on cannabis demand, a realm shrouded in prohibition for 95 years, said Rewak.

“At the end of the day, there was no baseline to compare it to,” he said.

Overall, he said the system has worked reasonably well and expects it will eventually be proven a success.

Some estimates place the annual demand for cannabis at 800,000 kilograms in a market that could produce $6 billion in revenues.

Source: https://calgaryherald.com/cannabis/cannabis-business/cannabis-industry-says-it-needs-more-approved-growers-to-meet-canadian-demand

Dry Spell: Canada Runs Low on Legal #Marijuana Just Weeks After Its Approval $BOG.ca $NBUD.ca $MCOA $ACG.ca $ACB $WEED.ca $HIP.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 11:25 AM on Thursday, November 8th, 2018

  • 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.

MONTREAL — 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,” Mr. 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.

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“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.

Bags of cannabis before being divided for sale at a dispensary in British Columbia.CreditAlana Paterson for The New York Times

“Producers can add more people to try and meet demand,” Mr. 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.

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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 Mr. Tobin, the shopkeeper. “We are called High North. But legal weed is in such short supply that no one is getting high on it.”

Mr. 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 pre-rolled 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 Mr. Tobin said it was not enough for the business to be profitable.

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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.

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Clones from cuttings being dipped in a rooting powder to stimulate growth at Pure Sunfarms.CreditAlana Paterson for The New York Times

“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 one-lane country road,“ he said. “It’s tough to get everything through the bottleneck on a timely basis.”

Mandesh Dosanjh, chief executive of Pure Sunfarms, a licensed cannabis producer based in British Columbia, said that shortages were not surprising given that producers were grappling with challenges such as mastering the growing of cannabis on a large scale, creating new supply chains across different provinces and allowing for rigorous and time-consuming inspections by Health Canada inspectors.

“It’s early days,” he said. “It’s hard to find know-how in an industry that was prohibited.”

Adam Greenblatt, a spokesman for Canopy Growth, one of the largest cannabis producers in the country, said the company was still building greenhouses in British Columbia, as it sought to accommodate a burgeoning market. Small things such as running out of the glue for the excise tax stamps required on every package of cannabis were causing some producers to have bottlenecks.

“Everyone is doing their best to meet demand,” he said. “Who would’ve thought that weed would be this popular?”

The Pure Sunfarms cultivation facility in VancouverCreditCreditAlana Paterson for The New York

Times
Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/07/world/canada/canada-marijuana-shortage.html

#Weed Wins on Election Day. So What Comes Next? $BOG.ca $NBUD.ca $MCOA $APPB$AERO $CBDS $CGRW $APH.ca $GBLX $ACG $ACB $WEED.ca $HIP.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 8:21 AM on Wednesday, November 7th, 2018

  • Michigan voted to legalize the recreational use of cannabis, while Utah and Missouri legalized it for medical use, according to projections made late Tuesday night. (A recreational measure in North Dakota failed, though medical cannabis remains legal there.)
  • They join 31 other states that have already gone the medical route, and nine others that have gone fully recreational
  • That’s a win for the citizens of these states—cannabis is far and away safer than alcohol and comes with a range of proven medical benefits, and still more that researchers are exploring

And so a few more dominoes fall. Michigan voted to legalize the recreational use of cannabis, while Utah and Missouri legalized it for medical use, according to projections made late Tuesday night. (A recreational measure in North Dakota failed, though medical cannabis remains legal there.) They join 31 other states that have already gone the medical route, and nine others that have gone fully recreational.

That’s a win for the citizens of these states—cannabis is far and away safer than alcohol and comes with a range of proven medical benefits, and still more that researchers are exploring. But it also may be a win for cannabis nationwide: The more states that legalize cannabis, the likelier it is that federal prohibition will topple soon.

“Momentum is gaining for change in Congress to allow states to determine their own marijuana policies,” says Morgan Fox, media relations director at the National Cannabis Industry Association. “Two thirds of the country wants marijuana to be legal, and politicians are ignoring that at their peril.”

This midterm election’s outcome is relevant to more than just the end game of dissolving the federal prohibition of cannabis. The momentum could also help the states that have already voted to legalize the drug but remain hamstrung by federal regulation. Over the summer, for instance, the Senate Appropriations Committee torpedoed an amendment that would have allowed banks to work with cannabis companies. This, of course, is a major headache for the industry: If a cultivator or distributor or dispensary can’t find a bank to work with, it’s kinda hard to do business.

States where marijuana is legal are also currently blocked from helping veterans gain better access to cannabis. In September, Congress stripped another amendment that would have allowed physicians affiliated with the Department of Veterans Affairs to recommend medical marijuana in states where it’s already legal.

So, the theory is that with more states voting to legalize, that attitude would trickle up to their representatives in Washington. And one particularly tall hurdle just fell. Republican Pete Sessions of Texas, the chairman of the House Rules Committee who’s been blocking votes on cannabis amendments, just lost to Democratic challenger Colin Allred. How serious is Allred about medical marijuana? It’s telling that he called Sessions out on the veterans amendment.

But then again, the cannabis momentum isn’t coming from politicians, but from the people. “One of the interesting political dynamics of cannabis legalization is that it’s happening in almost every state by ballot initiative,” says Ryan Stoa, author of the book Craft Weed: Family Farming and the Future of the Marijuana Industry. “Meaning, it’s not as if legislators are reading the tea leaves.”

Meaning, maybe we’re pinning too much hope on politicians to push for the federal reform their voters want. “For whatever reason, there still seems to be a lot of hesitation on behalf of politicians, even in the face of strong public support for legalization,” Stoa says.

It’s in a state’s best interest, though, to have cannabis legalized federally, because the economics of cannabis is nutso. Historically, California has provided perhaps three quarters of the domestically grown cannabis in the United States. That’s been over the black market, of course. But even though California has gone recreationally legal, that black market persists, both in-state (high taxes mean some patients skip the legal market) and across the country. Cultivators are “producing more supply than consumers are demanding in the state of California, which means a lot of that supply is going out of state on the black market,” says Stoa.

When a state goes legal, the cannabis sold in-state must be produced in-state (the feds don’t like interstate cannabis markets, for obvious reasons). But legalizing comes with severe growing pains. Small California growers, for instance, are buckling under the weight of new regulations meant to protect the environment and consumers. It’s mighty tempting, then, to skip selling to distributors (which in turn safety-test the product) and instead go black market and sell it all themselves out of state.

“The black market is thriving, and it’s going to continue to thrive,” says Swami Chaitanya, a (legal) grower in California’s legendary Mendocino County. “And the fact is that when it goes legal in those other states, then all of the persecution tends to drop down a level, until I imagine more black market will go to those states that are now legal.”

The fragmentation of the market could be especially acute in states that follow a similar, highly regulated legalization path as California, but that don’t have massive-scale local production of cannabis. Nevada had that problem, same with Colorado. But shortages would be less of a problem in the first place if cannabis were legal federally and producers could sell their products legitimately across state lines.

How Michigan, Utah, and Missouri settle into legal cannabis is to be seen, as is the pace with which Congress gets around to federal legalization. But a bit of bright news: we’ve got fresh faces. “With the new Congress,” says Chaitanya, “it’s almost a question of not so much, does it get legalized in most states, but are the congressional people elected going to be pro-cannabis?”

For the sake of their constituents, economies, prison systems, and the country in general, let’s hope so.

Source: https://www.wired.com/story/weed-wins-on-election-day-so-what-comes-next/?mbid=social_twitter