Cannabis | Marijuana > Cannabis General
Canada marijuana legalization takes big step with federal report now complete
ÂçïÐ_Rëƒlü×®:
Analysts predict Canada could have $4.5 billion industry by 2021; marijuana task force wraps up extensive report that is expected to include recommendations on everything from age limits to medical marijuana, safety and home grows
By Alicia Wallace, The Cannabist Staff
Canada’s marijuana task force announced Wednesday that it has fulfilled its mission and soon will deliver a final report to the government outlining recommendations for the country’s legal cannabis framework.
The report is being translated and will be provided to federal ministers and the public by mid-December, once it is in both official languages of English and French, according to a statement released Wednesday by Anne McLellan, chair of the Task Force on Marijuana Legalization and Regulation.
RELATED: Canada’s biggest cannabis company makes $321M biz acquisition
“It has been an honour for us, along with the other members of the Task Force, to have had the opportunity to engage with Canadians across the country who generously shared their expertise and perspectives on how the government should approach the legalization and regulation of cannabis,” she said in the statement. “We are pleased to announce that the Task Force has completed our work.”
More on Canada’s move to legalize
Hot topic: Ottawa Public Health says the minimum age for buying legal marijuana should be 25
It’s still illegal, though: Marijuana tops $1 billion in Canada
Canada calling: New task force on pot will consult with legal U.S. states
Weed news and interviews: Get podcasts of The Cannabist Show.
Subscribe to our newsletter here.
Watch The Cannabist Show.
Peruse our Cannabist-themed merchandise (T’s, hats, hoodies) at Cannabist Shop.
The report — which is expected to include recommendations on a variety of topics such as age limits, medical marijuana, safety and home grows, according to CBC News — follows five months of research and consultations that included 30,000 responses to an online questionnaire, meetings with provincial and territorial governments, interviews with experts across a variety of fields, conversations with medical patients, and visits internationally to states such as Colorado and Washington.
Earlier this week, McLellan told the Globe and Mail that adapting to marijuana legalization will take a significant psychological shift by law enforcement, governments and residents:
Right now, production and possession of marijuana is illegal unless it has been authorized for medical purposes, but the government estimates the illegal marijuana industry’s size at $7 billion ($5.2 billion U.S.), annually.
Ottawa has committed to introducing legislation in the spring that will move marijuana “from a criminal regime, where this was an illegal substance with criminal sanctions – some of them very serious – to a legalized product in a regulated marketplace,” Ms. McLellan said. It’s important to move slowly, and deliberately, in implementation, she added.
“Most Canadians think it’s time to move away from the system we have. But they are less clear about words like ‘decriminalization’ and ‘legalization.'”
As Canada marches closer to legalizing marijuana, the country could have a $4.5 billion industry on its hands by 2021, financial analysts project.
Canaccord Genuity analysts Matt Bottomley and Neil Maruoka published a note this week estimating that by 2021, Canada will have 3.8 million legal recreational marijuana users and a demand for 575,000 kilograms, or roughly 1.27 million pounds, of recreational and medical marijuana, according to a Bloomberg report.
If Canada legalizes in 2017 and sales begin in 2018, the initial demand is estimated to be about 400,000 kilograms, or 882,000 pounds, the analysts said.
Canaccord’s Bottomley and Maruoka did not respond Wednesday to a request from The Cannabist for further comment.
Canada is poised to become the second country in the world to legalize marijuana, behind Uruguay, which legalized in 2013. Colorado was the first locale to allow legal sales of recreational marijuana, starting in 2014.
avoca:
I read that Uruguay is not quite what we'd hope, strange regulations I think designed to discourage tourism and export...
So fucking ice cold Canada it is then? Dual citizenship and one can always return theoretically. Let's buy a farm and call it the Galaxy Lounge Ranch and bring our families , file to start the business -----
And never mention politics LOL!!!
I know many of you are psychos that would kill me in my sleep, but I still dream of escape with like minded individuals, start a freaking community if we can't drop into one... Hippy, sorry you punk rockers hahaha Hey I love Fugazi too!
Smallpox blankets, five corporations, much less Styrofoam oh man I'ma Spotify some Fugazi (they may not release their music to Spotify knowing my luck and their aesthetic). Off track there... But I do need to revisit Fugazi!
avoca:
Will Canada have better laws than Cali? Kratom... nothing to sniff at there but we could have good news soonish.
Hell I can't afford California, maybe what, Victorville lol? But sheeee-it, if pots legal i won't need much else...
Surely California will save us, communes for medical refugees, rescue me Cali please, Canada, help I'm going maximum mental here :knockedout:
Uruk-High:
Good on Canada, but what's with the 25 year old restriction recommendation? I've always felt that you are either an adult or you're not. Once one hits the agreed to age, then one should have full access as an adult.
And Canada is indeed too effin cold. I've hired some folks from Canada before, and they seemed willing to pay me if I would give them a job and get them out of there, LOL. I'll stick to trying to make things right in the good ole USA. MJ legalization is on a roll, and there's more to come. Of course, I've been burning over 30 years regardless of legality. Would be nice to grow my own again if we get there, though. :weedspin
avoca:
Yes, the cold, I think most any Canadian will admit they go stir crazy in the cold! True so true
More n more I want to be a public face of patient rights to my employer. Really push for MMJ being allowed in workplace. But I'm durty so duhrty, I'm not so sure I should be that face considering any PI could totally expose me .... Fuck I want to fight, fuck fuck
Navigation
[0] Message Index
[#] Next page
Go to full version