Health Status

Canada’s licensed pot producers face uncertainty after court says patients can grow their own

Licensed pot producers now face the risk of losing business to home growers who won't have to deal with the same regulations.

Canada’s nascent medical marijuana industry is being thrown into new turmoil with a court ruling that threatens to undercut its business design.

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For more than four decades, Smiths Falls was known as the “Chocolate Capital of Ontario” due to its iconic Hershey factory. But Hershey bolted in 2009, and some years later, the guarana plant was sold to a completely different sort of company: Tweed Marjuana Inc.

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Leading pot producers for example Canopy Growth Corp., Aphria Inc., Aurora Cannabis Inc. and Mettrum Health Corp. came into being for one specific reason: The federal government introduced rules in 2014 that required patients to purchase marijuana from licensed producers. Just before that, patients were getting licences to develop in your own home, which makes it hard for Ottawa to regulate the sector.

The decision Wednesday from federal court judge Michael Phelan could bring aspects of that old system back. He gave patients the authority to grow their own cannabis, arguing the current system restricts access to the drug.

It is another potential game-changer for this industry, which always appears to be in some stage of transition. Currently, the licensed pot producers are fighting competition from illegal dispensaries and seeking to launch new oil-based products (following a separate court ruling legalized them).

Share prices fell over the sector Wednesday as investors reacted to Judge Phelan’s decision. However the declines were modest, partly because nobody is certain what impact the ruling may have. Canopy shares dropped six percent, while Aurora shares fell nine percent.

“There’s a lot more questions than answers at this time,” said Aaron Salz, an analyst at Dundee Capital Markets.

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