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Published 2008-06-25 16:20:00
 


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The Toronto Star Carries A Good "Business" Story On British Columbian Marijuana Industry

(Ed. note: This is good journalism. What is described here is very similar to the Dutch industry, except that less Dutch cannabis is exported, much being bought by the coffee shops. The very size of the industry creates added incentive for legalization in Canada.)

From the Toronto Star
June 27, 1998
By Thomas Walkom
lettertoed@thestar.com

http://www.thestar.com/

See Remarkably Intelligent Article In The Toronto Star
Looks Beyond Prohibitionist Propaganda About Marijuana Potency

and
Statistics Show People With Marijuana Half As Likely To Face Charges If Caught In British Columbia; Excellent Article
and
The Cultivation Game -  About Marijuana Growing In Canada Press Release from Slice of Life Games

B.C.’S GRASS REALLY IS GREENER

Home-grown, highly potent marijuana is now as economically important to the province as logging.

WALK DOWN the creaking stairs into the basement of the man who calls himself Ken Black and there it is, the wave of the future, the saviour of the creaky British Columbian economy, the newest Canadian export success story.

Dope. Also known as grass. A.k.a pot. Real name, marijuana. Green gold.

B.C. marijuana plantations are no longer just isolated plots located deep in the province’s interior.

Now, most B.C. dope is cultivated indoors in Greater Vancouver usually in private homes.

Black (who, for obvious reasons, prefers to use a pseudonym) is a small-scale grower. His 65 plants, growing under high-intensity lamps in an otherwise unremarkable Vancouver house, will produce about six pounds of prilne B.C. marijuana this year.

That six pounds will be worth $18,000.

"Most of it will be for me and my friends," he says. "But I’d like to sell a couple of ounces a month just to cover expenses."

Black is typical. In B.C.’s lower Mainland, marijuana cultivation has become a wide-spread and lucrative cottage industry.

Stroll down any street, particularly in Surrey, a bedroom suburb situated right smack against the U.S. border, and you’re sure to run into what is called a grow house.

If the heavily curtained windows don’t give away what’s inside, the whir of fans and the occasional skunky-sweet smell of maturing marijuana plants will.

Constable Vince Arsenault, of the RCMP’s Surrey drug squad, estimates a sophisticated grower can produce $150,000 worth of marijuana in his basement every three months - on an initial $8,000 investment.

He also estimates that on some streets in his city of 325,000 every second home is a grow house.

"It’s absolutely phenomenal," says Arsenault. "We average one (bust) per shift - and we’re focusing only on the commercial-level, large-scale operations.

"We’re just scratching the surface."

The value of the B.C. marijuana crop is equally phenomenal. Officially, the RCMP estimates the crop is worth about $1 billion a year. But Constable Scott Rintoul of the RCMP’s drug awareness branch says the real number could be closer to $2 billion.

That would make pot as economically important to B.C. as logging, and roughly twice as important as the entire pulp and paper industry.

Salmon fishing, which has captured so many headlines recently, doesn’t hold a candle. Accordiug to Statistics Canada, the entire B.C. fishery was worth less than $300 million last year.

Throughout B.C., the mood is gloomy, as these traditional industries, battered by a combination of overfishing and the Asian crisis, head into recession.

By comparison, marijuana has taken off.

Thanks to the introduction of sophisticated growing and marketing techniques, B.C. marijuana is prized throughout the world.

A pound of prime B.C. pot sells for $3,000 in Vancouver and $3,000 (U.S.) just a few feet across the border in Blaine, Wash., says Arsenault.
(Ed. note: The Canadian dollar is 68 cents US.)

By the time that pound of dope reaches Los Angeles, it is worth $6,000 (U.S.) and can be exchanged for a pound of cocaine.

Indeed, some of B.C.’s marijuana traders deal in barter - taking pot across the border and returning with cocaine.

But Arsenault says that for drug dealers, cocaine is passe. Many are getting into marijuana.

"The only people dealing in coke and heroin are those who are too lazy to grow dope. The profit margins in marijuana are so much bigger."

The story of B.C.’s marijuana miracle is almost a textbook case of successful late-2Oth century capitalism.

All the ingredients touted by the best business schools were present: modern scientific methods, innovative entrepreneurs, free trade and an industry-friendly regulatory regime.

Dope had been grown up and down the Pacific coast of North America.

But when, under presidents Ronald Reagan and George Bush, the U.S. government began to crack down on drugs, even first-time marijuana growers in that country found themselves facing mandatory two-year jail terms.
(Ed. note: Would you believe life? The sentence depends on the number of plants. Our Canadian neighbors are too civilized to realize how bad it can be. )

As late as 1994, by contrast, first-time offenders nabbed in B.C. were likely to get no more than a $1,500 fine for growing marijuana.

Arsenault says growers referred to their fines as "paying the GST," a cost of doing business.

At the same time, savvy B.C. pot smokers were busy experimenting with new strains of marijuana.

Dana Larsen, the editor of Vancouver’s Cannabis Culture magazine, points out the province has had a long experience with marijuana. It was only natural to put this investment in human capital to use. www.cannabisculture.com

Essentially, B.C. growers came up with the same techniques used by scientific farmers in other fields. Careful breeding would produce the plants richest in tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, the mood-altering ingredient in marijuana.

As in large-scale, corporate hog farming, quality control could be achieved through the technique of total confinement - growing the plants indoors under meticulously regulated artificial lighting conditions.

Some growers found that hydroponic methods, growing the plants in soil-less water-soaked sponges, produced superior yields.

The most recent technique. says Larsen, is aeroponics - hanging the plants in the air and spraying their roots regularly with a nutrient-filled, water mist.

"Some people swear by hydroponics. others say aeroponics is the way to go," he says. "Others stick with soil. Who knows? It’s a real debate."

The 18th-century political economist Adam Smith, often referred to as the father of free enterprise, pointed out long ago that the division of labour could lead to superior profitability.

It’s a lesson not lost on B.C. dope growers. Arsenault says there are two increasingly common models for the industry.

In one, a grow-house specialist will set up an entire marijuana operation for the client - lights, water, fans. The specialist is then paid his fee and walks away to do the next job.

This is akin to the turnkey operations used by large-scale engineering firms who build nuclear reactors.

In the second, or McDonald’s model, an investor will set up what are in effect franchises. He will provide the capital to a subcontractor, on the condition that he grow the marijuana to specified quality standards.

The crop is usually divided between the two, with the bulk going to the backer.

For the labour-intensive task of harvesting, growers will often take advantage of specialized employment firms. Arsenault calls it dial-a-harvest.

These firms import pickers, often from regions of high unemployment in Atlantic Canada. Paid about $20 an hour, and offered inducements in kind, the pickers will carefully separate and bag the THC-rich marijuana buds from each plant.

Most of the product is then shipped across the border. The RCMP estimates that 75 per cent of B.C.’s indoor marijuana crop is exported to the United States.

Here, as in so many other export industries, the North American Free Trade Agreement has been a blessing. Traffic is brisk across the border between B.C. and Washington state; U.S. Customs agents cannot search every vehicle.

As well, knowledgeable insiders say, some entrepreneurs have taken advantage of the no-inspection lanes established for those otherwise legitimate Canadians who do regular cross-border business.

As in any high-growth industry, B.C.’s small-scale marijuana growers face threats from predatory competitors.

The RCMP claim that already 70 per cent of B.C’s commercial manjuana operations are controlled by the Hell’s Angels motorcycle club.

Others dispute this figure.

"I think the Hells Angels connection is overstated," says Cannabis Culture’s Larsen.

"The police say that to discredit the pot growers. I know people who cross the border regularly with up to 100 pounds a week and they’re no Hells Angels."

Arsenault acknowledges that no member of Hells Angels has ever been indicted in the Lower Mainland for involvement in a marijuana grow house.

However, he says, club members have been involved in franchise operations, renting properties that are used by others to grow marijuana.

"But that in itself isn’t sufficient to prosecute."

Rintoul, of the RCMP drug awareness branch, says the international nature of the business requires a sophisticated organization.

"The demand in the U.S. is so intense. Each order might be 50 to 200 pounds a week. To move that amount, you need organization."

By organized crime, he says he does not mean just organization like the Mafia. Many B.C. pot operations are independent of the more traditional gangs.

Ken Black acknowledges there are risks involved in an industry that operates outside the law. In some ways, the B.C. pot industry is like Russian capitalism. Growers never know when an armed competitor might break in to make off with the goods.

"And you can’t call the police if you’re ripped off," says Black.

Still, he says he doubts that the entire trade could ever be monopolized by the organized gangs. It is just too easy, he says, to grow marijuana at home and slip it into the U.S.

Look at him.

He bought a couple of high-intensity lamps at a local gardening store, some plastic sheeting, a timer, two small fans and seeds - all for less than $1,500.

He had a friend wire his lights into his clothes dryer ("It means we can use the dryer only six hours a day, which is a bit tough with a baby, but oh well.")

And if Black wanted to export, who could stop him?

Stuff 10 pounds of grass into a backpack, take the bus to Surrey, step across the ditch at the edge of town into the U.S. and there you are.

With this, Arsenault agrees. ‘While not a supporter of marijuana use, he says he is fighting an uphill battle.

"We lost the war against drugs years ago. Anyone who thinks we can win it though enforcement alone is foolish.

"Still, we’ve got to try as hard as we can."

 
 

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