QUAD BREATH
Well-Known Member
From: https://business.financialpost.com/...y-growth-corp-s-bid-to-scale-up-at-aldergrove
It’s 11 a.m. on a rainy Thursday morning and hundreds of Canopy Growth Corp. employees are shuffling into work at the company’s facility in Aldergrove, B.C.
After first donning Health Canada-mandated scrubs, lab jackets, hairnets and booties, they enter one of the facility’s massive greenhouses, where they’ll spend the next eight hours tending to thousands of cannabis plants.
The atmosphere inside is upbeat. Workers laugh and chat, mostly in Spanish or Punjabi, and the energetic beat of Bhangra music blasts from a bluetooth speaker, reverberating across the expansive greenhouse.
Together they account for one-third of Canopy’s licensed growing space, making Aldergrove one of the centrepieces of the company’s ambitious growth strategy, which has seen it acquire giant greenhouses at a frenetic pace over the past five years.
The promise of producing legal cannabis on a mass scale has helped catapult Canopy to the top of the rapidly expanding industry: With a market value of almost $20 billion, it is the largest cannabis company in the world.
But if Aldergrove is emblematic of Canopy’s ambitions, it has also become a source of concerns over just how well the company is progressing toward the lofty goals it has set for itself and promised investors.
Guatemalan workers tend to cannabis plants at Canopy Growth Corp.’s facility in Aldergrove, B.C., in early March 2019. Mark Yuen/Postmedia News
For months, whispers have circulated throughout the cannabis world about a brief video, purported to have been shot at the facility,that showed thousands of dead cannabis plants.
At least three people deeply involved in the cannabis industry — two of whom said they had visited the Aldergrove facility — told the Financial Post, on condition of anonymity, that the ramp-up at Aldergrove has been bumpy.
“It has not been a smooth transition from back when it was growing vegetables, to growing cannabis,” one person, who had visited the facility, said.
When the Financial Post visited Aldergrove in early March, one out of three greenhouses appeared to be in full use, housing thousands of plants, about five to six weeks old.
A second, known as Phase 2, was empty: Adam Greenblatt, the company’s B.C. business development lead, said it was between harvests, a process that typically takes up to three weeks.
The third greenhouse was still being retrofitted to accommodate cannabis cultivation.
The questions about Aldergrove come as Canada faces a severe cannabis supply shortage more than six months after recreational legalization, and four years after Canopy first started cultivating marijuana.
Canopy has publicly acknowledged hiccups at the facility, saying last fall that a number of plants had to be destroyed due to delays related to “infrastructure” and “regulatory approvals,” but it has insisted the plant deaths were not related to growing issues.
For a company whose chief executive, Bruce Linton, has said the goal all along has been to be No. 1, the stakes at Aldergrove are high: Getting the facility fully up to speed would go a long way toward silencing the company’s doubters.
But it remains a work in progress.

By square footage owned — and most other measures — Canopy is a behemoth in the cannabis world. The company has 4.4 million square feet of licensed cultivation space to its name, stretching across seven provinces.
British Columbia, infamous as a bastion of cannabis culture and long renowned as a source of black market supply, is central to this equation.
The 1.3 million square foot Aldergrove facility and another 1.7 million square feet of space in Delta make up two-thirds of Canopy’s total licensed operations.
Both B.C. facilities, which operate under the BC Tweed banner, were acquired in early 2018 from the Krahn family, longtime greenhouse operators who have been growing vegetables in the province for decades. It was a $400 million investment that the company touted as its ticket to “cementing shareholder value through scale production,” according to a May 2018 press release.
“The BC Tweed greenhouses represent a meaningful share of the entire Canadian production landscape,” Canopy said at the time.
Aldergrove received its cultivation licence in February of that year, and Delta was given the green light to start growing just two months later.
It’s 11 a.m. on a rainy Thursday morning and hundreds of Canopy Growth Corp. employees are shuffling into work at the company’s facility in Aldergrove, B.C.
After first donning Health Canada-mandated scrubs, lab jackets, hairnets and booties, they enter one of the facility’s massive greenhouses, where they’ll spend the next eight hours tending to thousands of cannabis plants.
The atmosphere inside is upbeat. Workers laugh and chat, mostly in Spanish or Punjabi, and the energetic beat of Bhangra music blasts from a bluetooth speaker, reverberating across the expansive greenhouse.
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Together they account for one-third of Canopy’s licensed growing space, making Aldergrove one of the centrepieces of the company’s ambitious growth strategy, which has seen it acquire giant greenhouses at a frenetic pace over the past five years.
The promise of producing legal cannabis on a mass scale has helped catapult Canopy to the top of the rapidly expanding industry: With a market value of almost $20 billion, it is the largest cannabis company in the world.
But if Aldergrove is emblematic of Canopy’s ambitions, it has also become a source of concerns over just how well the company is progressing toward the lofty goals it has set for itself and promised investors.

Guatemalan workers tend to cannabis plants at Canopy Growth Corp.’s facility in Aldergrove, B.C., in early March 2019. Mark Yuen/Postmedia News
For months, whispers have circulated throughout the cannabis world about a brief video, purported to have been shot at the facility,that showed thousands of dead cannabis plants.
At least three people deeply involved in the cannabis industry — two of whom said they had visited the Aldergrove facility — told the Financial Post, on condition of anonymity, that the ramp-up at Aldergrove has been bumpy.
“It has not been a smooth transition from back when it was growing vegetables, to growing cannabis,” one person, who had visited the facility, said.
When the Financial Post visited Aldergrove in early March, one out of three greenhouses appeared to be in full use, housing thousands of plants, about five to six weeks old.
A second, known as Phase 2, was empty: Adam Greenblatt, the company’s B.C. business development lead, said it was between harvests, a process that typically takes up to three weeks.
The third greenhouse was still being retrofitted to accommodate cannabis cultivation.
The questions about Aldergrove come as Canada faces a severe cannabis supply shortage more than six months after recreational legalization, and four years after Canopy first started cultivating marijuana.
Canopy has publicly acknowledged hiccups at the facility, saying last fall that a number of plants had to be destroyed due to delays related to “infrastructure” and “regulatory approvals,” but it has insisted the plant deaths were not related to growing issues.
For a company whose chief executive, Bruce Linton, has said the goal all along has been to be No. 1, the stakes at Aldergrove are high: Getting the facility fully up to speed would go a long way toward silencing the company’s doubters.
But it remains a work in progress.

By square footage owned — and most other measures — Canopy is a behemoth in the cannabis world. The company has 4.4 million square feet of licensed cultivation space to its name, stretching across seven provinces.
British Columbia, infamous as a bastion of cannabis culture and long renowned as a source of black market supply, is central to this equation.
The 1.3 million square foot Aldergrove facility and another 1.7 million square feet of space in Delta make up two-thirds of Canopy’s total licensed operations.
Both B.C. facilities, which operate under the BC Tweed banner, were acquired in early 2018 from the Krahn family, longtime greenhouse operators who have been growing vegetables in the province for decades. It was a $400 million investment that the company touted as its ticket to “cementing shareholder value through scale production,” according to a May 2018 press release.
“The BC Tweed greenhouses represent a meaningful share of the entire Canadian production landscape,” Canopy said at the time.
Aldergrove received its cultivation licence in February of that year, and Delta was given the green light to start growing just two months later.
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