Michigan Company Will Grow And Sell Marijuana In Canada

buckaroo bonzai

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Michigan Company Will Grow And Sell Marijuana In Canada


First, the Canadians sent one of their companies to Michigan to grow and sell marijuana; now, a Michigan company is doing the same thing to the land up north.


Forbes magazine reports that a company based in Michigan has been approved to compete with Prairie Plant Systems in the growing and selling of medical marijuana to registered Canadian patients. Creative Edge Nutrition of Madison Heights makes health supplements in the US and through their Canadian subsidiary, CEN Biotech, the firm announced in November that Health Canada had given them the green light to get growing. They will be the first US company to do so for the Canadian market.


Construction is already underway on a marijuana manufacturing center that is so close to Michigan we can probably see it. The 58,000 square foot facility in Lakeshore, Ontario will be producing cannabis in 7 months for a market that will include Israel, Uruguay, Iran and North Korea. The facility will feature laser sensors, night vision cameras and a radio frequency tagging system for the plants.


At a cost of $16 mil Canadian, the investment is a drop in the bucket for Creative Edge. CEO Bill Chaaban told Forbes, “By the end of year five we’ll be doing $100 million in sales.” The article lists the major players in the Creative Edge investment as “companies that deal in alcohol and tobacco, entertainment industry players and sports figures.”


CEN plans to produce cannabis at a fraction of the cost reported by the companies currently distributing to the Canadian market, who currently sell marijuana for between $5 and $6 Canadian per gram. That’s roughly equal to $4.75 – $5.50 US per gram. Chaaban claims he can produce marijuana for $.80 to $1 Canadian per gram, which would be welcome news to that country’s registered medical marijuana patients.


Prairie Plant Systems is one of three approved and producing companies currently supplying the Canadian medical marijuana market; in 2013 they successfully used lobbying efforts to jam a bill through both housesof Michigan’s legislature within a month and a half. That bill creates a law that would establish industrial cultivation of marijuana distributed through big-box pharmacies; a last-minute amendment from Governor Snyder cemented the need for a federal rescheduling of marijuana to take place before cannabis can be cultivated and sold in this manner.


Governor Snyder signed the bill, SB 660, into law before the end of 2013. It is now called Public Act 268 of 2013.
 
I don't think you can believe everything you read;

They do not have the green light to grow

16mil cost is about 10mil too much for 58k sqft in Lakeshore

Plans to sell to Israel, North Korea, Uruguay, I'm assuming this was meant as a joke

Production cost of .80-1.00/g in sw ont indoor, not a chance, 1.50 would be an accomplishment. What does production costs matter to patients? Projected selling price would be relevant.
 
I would not believe it either if it was not reported by Forbes. I can't not understand the reasoning behind producing in the US to
bring to Canada. From corporate tax rate to energy costs, real estate prices and laws, you would think they would want they would
have wanted to be in Canada.

Here is the Forbes article:

[h=1]Big Marijuana: Is It The Future?[/h]
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Creative Edge Nutrition, a publicly traded U.S. company, was recently approved to grow, dispense and export medical cannabis in Canada. (image: Caveman Chuck Coker on Flickr)

Love it or loathe it, marijuana as medicine is not a trend likely to disappear soon. Its use – and sale – is not going unnoticed by the legitimate business world.
Michigan-based nutritional supplement company, Creative Edge Nutrition, is on course to becoming the first U.S. company to be allowed to distribute medicinal marijuana in Canada, says CEO Bill Chaaban. In November the company was notified by Canada’s federal health department, Health Canada, that it has been approved to grow, distribute, import and export medicinal marijuana and plant seeds through its Canadian subsidiary CEN Biotech.
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Creative Edge, which sells health supplements and trades for fractions of a penny on OTC Markets, reported less than $2 million in the first half of 2013 but Chaaban – an attorney licensed to practice in both the U.S. and Canada – says this latest play could catapult the company’s earnings into the stratosphere. “By the end of year five we’ll be doing $100 million in sales, with a margin of 80 percent.”
Currently, for medicinal users in Canada, marijuana costs between $5 and $6 CAD per gram (that’s between $4.70 and $5.60 in U.S. dollars). CEN Biotech’s cost to produce runs between 80 cents and $1 CAD per gram. Chaaban predicts the operation will be up and running and ready to begin shipping within seven months.
CEN Biotech’s new 58,000 square foot facility – still under construction in Lakeshore, Ontario, across the Detroit River from Michigan – has cost the company about $16 million CAD. Chaaban claims capital was raised from a pool of, ahem, ‘seed’ investors that includes companies that deal in alcohol and tobacco, entertainment industry players and professional sports figures. He would not provide specific names. Chaaban estimates that he owns roughly 4% of the company.
The level of oversight mandated by Health Canada has demanded CEN Biotech design their new facility like a high security penitentiary, says Chaaban, including night vision cameras, laser sensors, 24-hour security staff and tagging technology that will allow the organization to monitor the movement of every single plant. “There will be RF-ID (radio frequency ID) tags on every single seed.”
Also, no purchase of product by registered patients can be conducted in cash and CEN Biotech’s leadership team – made up of four lawyers, two doctors of pharmacy, two former law enforcement officers, an agricultural engineer and an executive of a drug company – has been vetted by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.
Cannabis is used to treat the effects of glaucoma, Crohn’s disease, multiple sclerosis, nerve pain and chemotherapy, among other ailments. Health Canada had previously allowed individuals to apply for licenses to produce marijuana for medicinal use but increases in fire hazards, home invasions and crime have led the organization to push for a more regulated co-op system that requires fire and police approval, tracking and taxation, says Chaaban. Also, with so many producers, the organization had a hard time overseeing quality. “Too many people were applying to grow their own.”
Health Canada predicts that there will be half a million medicinal users in Canada within ten years but Chaaban feels that with the ease of access and assurance of consistency, that figure could be reached in two.
Not that Canada is CEN Biotech’s only market—the company’s 24 strains of plants will be exported to sources in Uruguay, Israel, The Netherlands, Mexico, Columbia, Iran and North Korea. Seeds from prime sources can be imported for use in the production facility.
Cannabis Day 2012, Vancouver. (image: Cannabis Culture on Flickr)

As far as the United States market is concerned, Chaaban is betting that as more states adopt laws embracing medicinal marijuana, state governments will look for taxable product sources they feel have trustworthy tracking procedures and he wants CEN Biotech to be among them. “Once the feds come on board we’ll definitely enter the U.S. market.”
Chaaban’s confidence that the U.S. will come around to enacting more lax cannabis legislation is not unfounded. Most recently, Colorado residents are able to purchase marijuana thanks to a law allowing the sale (no prescription required) and regulated production of marijuana which went into effect this week. At present, the state has 24 open shops selling the product with hundreds of pending applications from entrepreneurs interested in providing some service in the new industr.,
Other publicly traded firms work in the medicinal marijuana space, including Cannabis Science, Inc.; Endocan Corporation; GW Pharmaceuticals and Medical Marijuana, Inc. Should medical marijuana continue to be embraced by states and federal governments, more players are likely to enter the market as growers, distributors and investors.
 
let those fuckers plant all those plants out side. in mi or Canada. and watch the rainy days. all of the plants will get moldy . or when there in flower. they have to wait until there mature, in Michigan out side. you really have to chance the plants to get the harvest correct. you chance frost ! ok you can pull early but weak weed. or you can gamble and let I go and that one night frost , so they are farmers. they will pull early. the potency will be very weak and the buzz will give you a head ache after you smoke it. the buzz will be a slight head rush high . no body high totally pointless for medical . good luck with all those plants in Michigan or Canada. I did 1 out side last year. I had to cover the pot with tarps . did not want to finish . and the temp went down to 40f I pulled the next day it still needed 2 more weeks before it was good. and it was a 8 week short flower cycle. mi weed out side my opinion only. sucks. but green house weed is very good. can have ac and heat .
 
I was going to mention . the dea is all over cannabis even in Michigan. once they see over 100 plants. they will fly a chopper in and cut the grow down. if they have a permit or not from the state if its over 100 plants its getting chopped . no way in hell the dea will allow an body grow that many plants. they will wait until there close to maturity and then strike. costing those farmers millions of dollars putting them out of business. as they should be. medical cannabis is for patients not a business. good luck. I hope these jerks get shut down. there trying to stop mi patients and caretakers from growing there own. so they can tax you for medicine .
 
let those fuckers plant all those plants out side. in mi or Canada. and watch the rainy days. all of the plants will get moldy . or when there in flower. they have to wait until there mature, in Michigan out side. you really have to chance the plants to get the harvest correct. you chance frost ! ok you can pull early but weak weed. or you can gamble and let I go and that one night frost , so they are farmers. they will pull early. the potency will be very weak and the buzz will give you a head ache after you smoke it. the buzz will be a slight head rush high . no body high totally pointless for medical . good luck with all those plants in Michigan or Canada. I did 1 out side last year. I had to cover the pot with tarps . did not want to finish . and the temp went down to 40f I pulled the next day it still needed 2 more weeks before it was good. and it was a 8 week short flower cycle. mi weed out side my opinion only. sucks. but green house weed is very good. can have ac and heat .

Growers all over the country practice early light depravation and some years outdoor works out perfect
As to anyone believing something because it is in "Forbes"
SMH all media has agenda's
 
Growers all over the country practice early light depravation and some years outdoor works out perfect
As to anyone believing something because it is in "Forbes"
SMH all media has agenda's

My point being Forbes is not the national inquirer. It was not even an opinion piece either, it was a reporting piece. There was not much there
to believe or disbelieve. They were just reporting on something that has already happened.
 
My point being Forbes is not the national inquirer. It was not even an opinion piece either, it was a reporting piece. There was not much there
to believe or disbelieve. They were just reporting on something that has already happened.

The point is it hasn't happened. They don't have a licence or a green light.
The article is full of errors.
 
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