Close X
Friday, October 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Growing Own Pot Is Like Making Homebrew, Says Canada's Largest Medical Marijuana Producer

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Feb, 2016 12:19 PM
    Canada's largest publicly traded producer of medical marijuana is making the case for the quality of weed made by large-scale manufacturers compared to homegrown bud.
     
    The difference is the same as drinking homebrew versus a good bottle of wine, Bruce Linton, chairman and CEO of Canopy Growth Corp. (TSXV:CGC), said Thursday during a call with analysts.
     
    "People say: 'It's just soil, it grows easily,'" he said.
     
    "No, no, no — quality and consistency doesn't happen without chemicals unless you're running a proper facility."
     
    Linton added that the Smith Falls, Ont., company — which operates Bedrocan Canada Inc. and Tweed Marijuana Inc. — is unfazed by Wednesday's court ruling that permits about 28,000 patients to continue to grow pot at home.
     
    Federal Court Judge Michael Phelan struck down a law introduced by the former Conservative government that required patients to buy cannabis through the mail from licensed producers, ruling it was an arbitrary and overly broad violation of charter rights.
     
     
    Instead, Linton said, allowing patients to continue to grow their own weed will be "good advertising" for his company once they realize that Canopy's product is far superior.
     
    "We've never been fussed," said Linton, adding that he doesn't think the decision will "materially impact" his company's business.
     
    Canopy, which currently produces medical marijuana via Bedrocan, says it's also ramping up preparations to supply marijuana to recreational users when the laws change, something it expects to happen soon.
     
    Linton also anticipates the federal Liberal government will have to revise current rules governing what types of medical marijuana products can be sold. Last year, the Supreme Court ruled that medical marijuana users can legally use various forms of the drug, including oils.
     
     
     
    On Thursday, the company was given the go-ahead to begin selling cannabis oils. The 100-ml bottles, a mix of sunflower and cannabis oils, are priced between $95 to $155.
     
    In its latest quarterly results, Canopy reported exponential growth in revenue and sales volume, but the company remains unprofitable.
     
    Revenue for the three months ended Dec. 31 was $3.5 million, up from just $641,000 a year earlier.
     
    It sold 462,000 grams at an average price of $7.34 per gram during the period, Canopy's fiscal third quarter. That compares with 87,000 grams at $7.04 per gram in the comparable period a year earlier.
     
     
     
    Net loss was $3.3 million or four cents per share, compared with $2.6 million or seven cents per share a year earlier when there were fewer shares outstanding.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Katelynn Sampson Inquest To Hear From Pathologist On Death Of 7-year-old Girl

    Katelynn Sampson Inquest To Hear From Pathologist On Death Of 7-year-old Girl
    The coroner's inquest into the death of seven-year-old Toronto girl at the hands of her guardians is hearing she was once struck so hard that her liver ruptured.

    Katelynn Sampson Inquest To Hear From Pathologist On Death Of 7-year-old Girl

    Andre Noel Denny Pleads Guilty To Manslaughter In Death Of Halifax Gay Rights Activist

    Andre Noel Denny Pleads Guilty To Manslaughter In Death Of Halifax Gay Rights Activist
    A man has pleaded guilty to manslaughter in the fatal beating death of a prominent gay rights activist outside a Halifax bar more than three years ago.

    Andre Noel Denny Pleads Guilty To Manslaughter In Death Of Halifax Gay Rights Activist

    Crackle And Glow: Saskatchewan Photographer Captures Fireball In Night Sky

    Crackle And Glow: Saskatchewan Photographer Captures Fireball In Night Sky
    A huge fireball that crackled and glowed as it streaked across the night sky was captured by a Saskatchewan photographer almost by accident.

    Crackle And Glow: Saskatchewan Photographer Captures Fireball In Night Sky

    Crackle And Glow: Saskatchewan Photographer Captures Fireball In Night Sky

    Crackle And Glow: Saskatchewan Photographer Captures Fireball In Night Sky
    A huge fireball that crackled and glowed as it streaked across the night sky was captured by a Saskatchewan photographer almost by accident.

    Crackle And Glow: Saskatchewan Photographer Captures Fireball In Night Sky

    Order RCMP To Open File Into Leak Of Secret Spy Agency Documents, Court Urged

    Order RCMP To Open File Into Leak Of Secret Spy Agency Documents, Court Urged
    RCMP should be forced to open their file from their four-year-old criminal investigation into the leak of secret intelligence documents to the media, a man once accused of terrorism ties argues in court filings.

    Order RCMP To Open File Into Leak Of Secret Spy Agency Documents, Court Urged

    Father Of Hero Soldier, Collin Fitzgerald, Faces Police Obstruction Charge In Arrest Of Son

    Father Of Hero Soldier, Collin Fitzgerald, Faces Police Obstruction Charge In Arrest Of Son
    OTTAWA — The father of one of Canada's most highly decorated soldiers will face an Ontario provincial court judge today in connection with the August 2014 arrest of his son.

    Father Of Hero Soldier, Collin Fitzgerald, Faces Police Obstruction Charge In Arrest Of Son