Six months after legalization, high prices and supply issues boost illicit pot market First legal 4

gb123

Well-Known Member
TORONTO -- When cannabis supply at Small Town Buds begins to dwindle, co-owner Chris Felgate shuts the doors of his Devon, Alta., shop and turns customers away.

Even though the legal retailer often still has oils and capsules in stock, most shoppers are looking for the store's namesake product, he said.

"Having our doors open with no flower available was making customers more angry... It's like going into a grocery store and not having groceries," he said.

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Owner Chris Felgate looks over the display cases at Small Town Buds in Devon Alta, on Wednesday April 17, 2019. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jason Franson

Since he first opened his doors on Oct. 17, the closures became a near-weekly ritual as demand outstripped the supply he was able to procure from the provincial government distributor, he said.

The situation began improving in March, however, after the Alberta Gaming, Liquor and Cannabis agency added additional suppliers, and he has kept his doors open consistently since. But the weekly supply he receives still lacks in selection and quantity, Felgate said.

"We're lucky if we're getting one or two cases of strains. We purchase everything that is available to us, whether we like the product or not."

It has been six months since Canada became the first industrialized country to legalize recreational cannabis, in a bid to stamp out the illicit market. On that landmark day, high demand resulted in lineups at the few bricks-and-mortar stores that were ready, delivery delays and stock outs.

Licensed producers ramped up production in anticipation of Oct. 17, but product was scant and many companies pointed to supply chain issues as a major cause of the bottleneck.

And on this 4-20, the first annual celebration of cannabis culture post-legalization, many pot enthusiasts are still smoking joints they did not buy through legal channels.

The vast majority of cannabis, or 79 per cent, was bought illegally in the fourth quarter, according to Statistics Canada, down from 90 per cent in the third quarter.

Legal sales of dried flower across Canada in February were down 8.8 per cent from January, partially due to a shorter month, but average daily sales of dried cannabis in February remained relatively flat, up one per cent from the previous month.

Meanwhile, inventory of dried cannabis products which are finished -- meaning packaged, labelled and ready for sale -- at cannabis companies rose by more than 19 per cent to 12,110 kilograms in February. The amount of unfinished dried cannabis held by licensed producers increased to 120,731 kilograms, up 4.1 per cent from January.

"Health Canada is aware of reports of localized shortages of cannabis products in some markets and for some product lines," said Tammy Jarbeau, a spokeswoman for the government agency. "The supply of cannabis is not the issue. The issue is the supply chain, in other words, converting raw product into packaged goods and moving it to distributors or retailers and to customers."

Based on industry figures, there is enough cultivation space to produce approximately one million kilograms of pot per year, she added.

Allan Rewak, the executive director of the Cannabis Council of Canada, said much of that unfinished inventory is product unsuitable for sale to consumers. As well, licensed producers face various regulatory hurdles such as obtaining necessary licenses for processing product that does meet the bar, he said.

"It's a multistage process. If it was simple as put plants in the ground and they'll grow, you would have seen the situation fully resolved by now," he said. "But this is a complex system by design."

Aphria Inc. sold less cannabis to recreational users during its latest quarter ended Feb. 28, compared with the previous one, due to supply shortages and packaging and distribution challenges.

But Bruce Linton, co-chief executive of Canopy Growth Corp., said it has ramped up the amount it can package and ship, from roughly 300,000 units in October to 1.3 million in March. With automation and new equipment, output is getting better, but as more stores open their doors demand grows, he said.

"The equation keeps evolving... It's not a static market," he said.

Several provincial government retailers and distributors say they have seen marked improvement in recent weeks, but supply remains an ongoing challenge. Many of these provincial entities have signed on additional licensed producers to boost supply as Health Canada gives more companies the green light to cultivate and sell.

In B.C., the Liquor Distribution Branch has been receiving a larger share of the amount ordered from suppliers compared with the initial weeks of legalization, according to spokeswoman Kate Bilney.

Manitoba Liquor and Lotteries is receiving, on average, about 30 per cent of the product it is expecting each month, spokesman Lorne Kletke said.

In Quebec, supply is getting better "week by week" and the Societe quebecoise du cannabis expects significant improvement by the end of spring, said spokesman Fabrice Giguere. But the crunch is "not over yet," and its outlets will remain shut on Mondays and Tuesdays, he added.

Cannabis retail chain Fire and Flower is seeing a boost in supply, but at a slower rate than expected, said its chief executive Trevor Fencott.

The company -- which has stores in Alberta, Ontario and Saskatchewan -- is seeing more product from the latter province which has a more efficient, private distribution model, he said.

"In Saskatchewan, we buy directly from licensed producers," Fencott said. "And we have never ever had anyone not deliver to us. Ever. They always meet their commitments."

But even when legal retailers are stocked up, price remains an issue.

The unweighted average price of a legal gram of dried cannabis is $9.99 per gram, compared with the average illicit price of $6.37 per gram -- a price gap that appears to be widening, according to an analysis by Statistics Canada of submitted price quotes.

Regular cannabis users are unlikely to make the switch until the price of legal cannabis becomes more competitive, said Fencott.

He points to Colorado where prices have dropped dramatically since legalization, at the expense of illegal dealers. Legalization at a national scale is a massive endeavour, and things will improve, in time, he said.

"We are still doing something that no country on the planet is doing," Fencott said. "So while it is frustrating on some level, we always keep in the back of our mind the enormity of the task."

from the same asshole that ran MET RUNS and is IN COURT BEING SUED and they also own EMBLEM as well... friggin chisslzes
 

The Hippy

Well-Known Member
Here we go...the truth was hidden in there somewhere.

"Allan Rewak, the executive director of the Cannabis Council of Canada, said much of that unfinished inventory is product unsuitable for sale to consumers. "

We know that...we grow it better. Fuckwads

BOYCOTT folks it's working just to plan perfectly.
 

CalyxCrusher

Well-Known Member
It's a multistage process. If it was simple as put plants in the ground and they'll grow, you would have seen the situation fully resolved by now," he said. "But this is a complex system by design."
It kinda almost is once ya know WTF you're doing. The problem is you morons over complicated a simple process and now have issue after issue and excuse after excuse. It's like they have a gaping wound and they stick a band aid on it. And when that gets all bloody and falls off they slap another on, then another and another without ever addressing the actual problem. Throwing mountains of cash at a problem won't fix it. Learn to grow then scale up. Had you done this from the get go it would have been less painful and you'd probably have a better product.
 

OldMedUser

Well-Known Member
I got a buddy that has been buying legal schwag here in northern Alberta and the few I've had a look at are really crap for the money. Popcorn buds, bits of leaf and dry as f'n bone. Has a nasty aftertaste that has to be 'permitted' bug and fungal sprays.

On the plus side I have a bunch of 'legal' containers to transport my pot around in tho rarely carry when I go out. :)
 

The Hippy

Well-Known Member
Even if I had a legal container I'd only use it for bathroom functions. I'm not giving anyone, even the pigs the impression I'd ever buy or use their forced hypocrit schwagg.
I'd simply tell the cop where it came from isn't your concern. It's under an ounce and in the trunk..so fuck off.
 

OldMedUser

Well-Known Member
Even if I had a legal container I'd only use it for bathroom functions. I'm not giving anyone, even the pigs the impression I'd ever buy or use their forced hypocrit schwagg.
I'd simply tell the cop where it came from isn't your concern. It's under an ounce and in the trunk..so fuck off.
Yeah . . . well . . . I'd rather just avoid the hassle myself.

I've been smoking and walking around with pot for 50 years and growing for 40 and other than having a bag taken by cops had no other problems.

If I'm on the wrong side of the law I'll kiss a little hind titty. Yes sir, no sir, 3 bags full sir. ;)

Been in home invasions by cops. Never ratted out anyone even under threat of more serious charges but have a finely tuned spidey sense that has kept me out of harm's way all these decades.

Discretion is the better part of valour when it comes to dealing with cops. Keep your yap shut but keep the evil eye on the pricks!

I may finally file to legally grow. I have a 12g/day medical and my wife was just diagnosed with liver cancer so could get a few more g/day for her easy enough then use the potential to crank out piles-o-pot.

I'd much rather be a nobody than in the cop's sights thank you very much. Never bought legal pot and never will.

:peace:
 

The Hippy

Well-Known Member
Yeah . . . well . . . I'd rather just avoid the hassle myself.

I've been smoking and walking around with pot for 50 years and growing for 40 and other than having a bag taken by cops had no other problems.

If I'm on the wrong side of the law I'll kiss a little hind titty. Yes sir, no sir, 3 bags full sir. ;)

Been in home invasions by cops. Never ratted out anyone even under threat of more serious charges but have a finely tuned spidey sense that has kept me out of harm's way all these decades.

Discretion is the better part of valour when it comes to dealing with cops. Keep your yap shut but keep the evil eye on the pricks!

I may finally file to legally grow. I have a 12g/day medical and my wife was just diagnosed with liver cancer so could get a few more g/day for her easy enough then use the potential to crank out piles-o-pot.

I'd much rather be a nobody than in the cop's sights thank you very much. Never bought legal pot and never will.

:peace:
Thing is why my suggestion above is ON the right side of the law...the cop's the one who isn't ...hence his dismissal. You can only act like that when your right of course.
But that's not hard with these rules.
1: under an ounce
2: any container you like.
3: stick in trunk.
4: Legal and all cocky...if need be. Leave the pound of crack at home that day.
You all nice n legal now...time to be rude if provoked. Tastefully of course. He won't even know i'm insulting him.
 

OldMedUser

Well-Known Member
You all nice n legal now...time to be rude if provoked. Tastefully of course. He won't even know i'm insulting him.
I'm no ass-kisser but until a cop goes asshole on me I'm as diplomatic as you can get.

Even a good cop has a feeling of superiority over us citizens and as soon as you threaten his authority he reverts to the brainwashing he got in the academy. He/she will start off being officer friendly and make small talk to relax you but is putting every little thing you say into his tiny brain to make up some sort of reason to dig deeper.

Coming home from my 50th b-day trip to BC about 14 years ago I got pulled over for speeding. 127 in a 100 zone just shy of the Alberta border in the Rockies near Hinton heading home from Kelowna, BC.

Had a sawed-off 12 gauge Wingmaster shotgun with a pistol grip in a hockey bag in the trunk of my '85 Olds with a couple dozen illegal shot shot shells. SS 'OO' instead of the #4 shot marked on the shells fer instance. An old and probably stolen Ruger 10-22 in the back seat under lots of crap. He was all friendly then after checking out my ID in his car asked if he could dig around in my crap. I looked him straight in the eye and told him he had no right to search my person or vehicle and if he did so it was under protest and would be fought in court. He said OK and handed me back my ID with a warning to watch my speed. Had to change my skivvies after that but was glad to be free. Got rid of the shotgun not long after I got home but still have the .22.

The vast majority of 'citizens' would have let him search their cars but I've had dealings with cops since I was a juvie and don't fall for their BS. Not to mention shrinks and my past therapist have told me I suffer from 'authority defense personality syndrome'. That started with my dad. lol

Helps to be educated and aware too.

:peace;
 
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