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As of 10 October 2019 194 authorized licensed medical marijuana producers have been approved by Health Canada. Including: [1] Aurora Cannabis; Aphria; CanniMed; Canopy Growth Corporation; Organigram; Tantalus Labs; The Green Organic Dutchman; Tilray; VIVO Cannabis; Zenabis
Cannabis flowers next to a plastic canister of 3.5 grams. Cannabis in Canada is legal for both recreational and medicinal purposes. Cannabis was originally prohibited in 1923 until medicinal use of cannabis was legalized nationwide under conditions outlined in the Marijuana for Medical Purposes Regulations issued by Health Canada, which regulated medical cannabis effective 30 July 2001, and ...
In early November, Canada Post advised the OCS that the names and addresses of 4,500 customers had been accessed by an individual without authority to do so. [16] Ontario bans the sale of recreational marijuana to anyone under the age of 19 (the same age that one can legally purchase alcohol or tobacco) and adults can carry up to 30 grams in ...
Despite Health Canada issuing 116 licenses through August, a small handful of growers could combine for more than 1.5 million kilograms of annual production. 4 Marijuana Stocks Could Control Half ...
These 10 growers should surpass 100,000 kilograms in annual pot production.
Major news out of Canada this week brought renewed attention to the legal marijuana industry, with the North American nation becoming just the second country in the world to legalize a statewide ...
In 2000, PPS received a contract from Health Canada to grow medical cannabis. [3] It used its facility in Flin Flon for this purpose. [ 4 ] From that time until 2013, PPS was the only company given a Health Canada license to grow cannabis, although as of 2012 only 12% of medical cannabis users used PPS, with most of the rest growing their own ...
Adult-use cannabis can only be sold in packages of a single color without graphics other than the logo and a health warning. [9] Cannabis companies in Canada are not allowed to promote themselves through TV commercials, billboards, or glossy magazine ads, sponsor people or events, or put their names on sports and cultural facilities. [10]