CANT TRSUT WHATS IN LP SHWAGS.its poison..

gb123

Well-Known Member
It’s common knowledge that product quality plays a strong role in consumer decision making. Health Canada’s most recent National Cannabis Survey reports that 76 percent of consumers are motivated by quality and safety when deciding where to make their purchases.

The cannabis legalization roll-out across Canada received some backlash for a lack of accessibility and the quality of the available product. There have been scandals regarding the use of banned pesticides, reports of grey market cannabis making its way to the public, and stories of our neighbours to the south fighting accusations of forged lab tests.

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Behind the scenes, lab testing is a mandatory part of the quality assurance process that costs upwards of $3,000 per single-sample batch. The current reputation of laboratories is sub-standard at best, with only a few companies actually adhering to the GMP-level standards that have been set.


As it stands, the Canadian industry measures quality assurance by testing the chemical makeup of the product, including cannabinoids and terpenes, and screens for contaminants such as mould, heavy metals and pesticides. Cannabis producers are not currently required to test or disclose publicly the entire chemical composition of their cultivars.

Related: Pesticide Contamination Is a Growing Cannabis Safety Concern

Testing only the basic chemical makeup of a product fails to distinguish each particular cultivar and the individualized impact it may have on a consumer's endocannabinoid system (ECS). As science progresses and we learn more about the plant and the ECS, the shortsighted disregard of the true potential to accurately match cultivars to a consumer’s biological needs will become intolerable.

When it comes to cannabis, there’s a long-held but incorrect belief that simply looking at a plant’s morphology can determine its effects. Indica and Sativa have long-ruled as cannabis descriptors, simplified to mean that shorter plants with broad leaves are sedative-leaning and that taller plants with slender leaves are energy-inducing. The truth is that looking at the full chemical makeup of plants is a much more accurate way to determine what effects a certain cultivar can achieve.

Lab tests can provide a breakdown of cannabinoids and terpenes. This ratio and the interaction of these compounds with each other can provide consumers with practical information that will help direct them to the right strain for a desired effect. The science is available, it's just not widely shared.


There’s even another level of data that would be helpful to consumers. Testing only the chemical makeup of cultivars fails to determine its true genetic composition. Determining a plant’s genotype in addition to chemotype provides important information regarding how CBD and THC levels are expressed. Like humans, cannabis inherits two copies of a gene. A plant’s genetics influence the plant’s ability to produce THC and CBD depending on the cannabinoid enzymes it inherits.

Genetic testing also provides a direct link to the origin of a plant. It ensures that the end consumer is getting the product that they believe they’ve purchased. In other words, you know that the Blue Dream you just bought is actually Blue Dream and not just a name.

Related: Florida Finally Allows Actual Marijuana Flower in Medical Marijuana Dispensaries

This type of verification also guarantees that a cultivar has come from a legal source. According to Statistics Canada’s fourth quarter report, household spending on cannabis totalled $5.9 billion at an annual rate, with $4.7 billion still attributed to illicit sales.

Current testing and reporting is also limited in that is does not distinguish between unregulated and legal products. The chemical makeup of the plant does not trace it back to its origins. Illicit product can still find its way into the legal stream, thus failing to combat diversion in the industry.

All of this leads to one simple reality: as testing continues to improve, we should be demanding full transparency from our cannabis companies. It’s the only way to truly ensure that a product is what it claims to be and that its qualities match consumer expectations and medical requirements.
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
California marijuana growers could produce so much weed that they crash the market, The Sacramento Bee reported.

The outlet said Tuesday that 1,142 acres of cannabis farms hold permits in the state, citing a report by distribution company Vessel Logistics. This means that licensed farms can harvest 9 million pounds of marijuana. But the report said the existing market could accommodate only 1.8 to 2.2 million pounds.

Armando Gudiño, the California Policy Manager at the Drug Policy Alliance’s Los Angeles office, described the mismatch in supply and demand as growing pains from a difficult rollout of recreational legalization, which was approved by voters in 2016.

He noted that three different state agencies have a role in regulation efforts. While the Bureau of Cannabis oversees commercial licenses, CalCannabis Cultivation Licensing monitors the state's track-and-trace system and issues licenses to cultivators, according to the state website. Manufactured Cannabis Safety Branch watches over commercial manufacturing and makes sure manufacturers adhere to cleanliness and labeling guidelines.

Gudiño noted cities had struggled to agree on the regulatory framework, but said there is potential for California to bloom into a vast market.

"The overwhelming majority of the state has not developed responsible regulations that will allow the market to regulate itself. As a result you have a small percentage of the state providing regulated cannabis to a state that overwhelmingly supported legalization," Gudiño told Newsweek. "California is poised to be the largest marijuana market in the country, in the world."

The report from Vessel Logistics, however, said that the state's industry had overestimated demand. Prior reports have also noted that the legal industry is not generating as much tax revenue as expected. The New York Times noted that the state sold less legal cannabis in 2018 than the prior year, when it was not legal recreationally.

The California Compassionate Care Network marijuana dispensary's grow operation is one of the stops on the cannabis tour organized by L.A.-based Green Tours on January 24. ROBYN BECK/AFP/Getty Images

Mason Tvert, Media Relations Director at Marijuana Policy Project and Morgan Fox, the Media Relations Director at the National Cannabis Industry Association, both said California could address the discrepancy by considering selling across state lines.

"It could be worthwhile to start having that conversation and considering what steps California would need to take, as well as what changes might need to occur federally, for the state to begin establishing itself as a supplier for other states. Perhaps officials in California and Oregon could even band together to begin pushing for federal changes that allow for interstate commerce," Tvert said. "For decades, California has been supplying cannabis for other parts of the country through an illegal market. Rather than solely focusing on how to keep cannabis from illegally leaving the state, California officials may want to look into how it could start allowing it to leave the state legally."

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Fox said he didn't think growers would start distributing on the black market to compensate income. "I don't think we’re going to see a lot of people who have fought so hard to get licenses risk losing those licenses," he told Newsweek.

The state's Bureau of Cannabis Control did not immediately respond when contacted by Newswee
 

Egzoset

Well-Known Member
Yes, "poison" indeed, and not just chemically speaking: it's actually part of a much larger toxic (VILIFICATION) trend, resulting from politically-driven socio-economic POISON. In The Name Of Children...
 

Jefferson1977

Well-Known Member
It’s common knowledge that product quality plays a strong role in consumer decision making. Health Canada’s most recent National Cannabis Survey reports that 76 percent of consumers are motivated by quality and safety when deciding where to make their purchases.

The cannabis legalization roll-out across Canada received some backlash for a lack of accessibility and the quality of the available product. There have been scandals regarding the use of banned pesticides, reports of grey market cannabis making its way to the public, and stories of our neighbours to the south fighting accusations of forged lab tests.

Recommended Video



Behind the scenes, lab testing is a mandatory part of the quality assurance process that costs upwards of $3,000 per single-sample batch. The current reputation of laboratories is sub-standard at best, with only a few companies actually adhering to the GMP-level standards that have been set.


As it stands, the Canadian industry measures quality assurance by testing the chemical makeup of the product, including cannabinoids and terpenes, and screens for contaminants such as mould, heavy metals and pesticides. Cannabis producers are not currently required to test or disclose publicly the entire chemical composition of their cultivars.

Related: Pesticide Contamination Is a Growing Cannabis Safety Concern

Testing only the basic chemical makeup of a product fails to distinguish each particular cultivar and the individualized impact it may have on a consumer's endocannabinoid system (ECS). As science progresses and we learn more about the plant and the ECS, the shortsighted disregard of the true potential to accurately match cultivars to a consumer’s biological needs will become intolerable.

When it comes to cannabis, there’s a long-held but incorrect belief that simply looking at a plant’s morphology can determine its effects. Indica and Sativa have long-ruled as cannabis descriptors, simplified to mean that shorter plants with broad leaves are sedative-leaning and that taller plants with slender leaves are energy-inducing. The truth is that looking at the full chemical makeup of plants is a much more accurate way to determine what effects a certain cultivar can achieve.

Lab tests can provide a breakdown of cannabinoids and terpenes. This ratio and the interaction of these compounds with each other can provide consumers with practical information that will help direct them to the right strain for a desired effect. The science is available, it's just not widely shared.


There’s even another level of data that would be helpful to consumers. Testing only the chemical makeup of cultivars fails to determine its true genetic composition. Determining a plant’s genotype in addition to chemotype provides important information regarding how CBD and THC levels are expressed. Like humans, cannabis inherits two copies of a gene. A plant’s genetics influence the plant’s ability to produce THC and CBD depending on the cannabinoid enzymes it inherits.

Genetic testing also provides a direct link to the origin of a plant. It ensures that the end consumer is getting the product that they believe they’ve purchased. In other words, you know that the Blue Dream you just bought is actually Blue Dream and not just a name.

Related: Florida Finally Allows Actual Marijuana Flower in Medical Marijuana Dispensaries

This type of verification also guarantees that a cultivar has come from a legal source. According to Statistics Canada’s fourth quarter report, household spending on cannabis totalled $5.9 billion at an annual rate, with $4.7 billion still attributed to illicit sales.

Current testing and reporting is also limited in that is does not distinguish between unregulated and legal products. The chemical makeup of the plant does not trace it back to its origins. Illicit product can still find its way into the legal stream, thus failing to combat diversion in the industry.

All of this leads to one simple reality: as testing continues to improve, we should be demanding full transparency from our cannabis companies. It’s the only way to truly ensure that a product is what it claims to be and that its qualities match consumer expectations and medical requirements.
Calls for genotype testing. Would not surprise me this article was actually sponsored by the LPs as only they can afford this type of testing additionally this type of testing would ensure all seeds had to be purchased from a "legal" source and would make the job of law enforcement a lot easier with regards to so-called illicit marijuana. What I wonder is what happens to all the cultivars that we medical patients are growing? Are they deemed illegal....
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
Calls for genotype testing. Would not surprise me this article was actually sponsored by the LPs as only they can afford this type of testing additionally this type of testing would ensure all seeds had to be purchased from a "legal" source and would make the job of law enforcement a lot easier with regards to so-called illicit marijuana. What I wonder is what happens to all the cultivars that we medical patients are growing? Are they deemed illegal....
what they want to do
and what they are not capable of doing:idea:
 

The Hippy

Well-Known Member
Calls for genotype testing. Would not surprise me this article was actually sponsored by the LPs as only they can afford this type of testing additionally this type of testing would ensure all seeds had to be purchased from a "legal" source and would make the job of law enforcement a lot easier with regards to so-called illicit marijuana. What I wonder is what happens to all the cultivars that we medical patients are growing? Are they deemed illegal....
I think it would be a court challenge and I can't see a judge dismissing somebodies med plants. After all, we were legal before groper's pants dropped and his excitement showed.
 
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