The Massive Marijuana Market You Won't See in Canada -- At Least Not This Year

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You probably know by now that Canada is on course to allow the adult use of marijuana for recreational purposes in October. And you probably know that many project that the market will be big -- with some estimating first-year sales of CA$5 billion and perhaps even more.

What some might not realize, however, is that one potentially massive marijuana market won't be open for business in Canada this year. But this market should be on the path to legalization in 2019, with companies such as Canopy Growth (NYSE: CGC) champing at the bit.

Marijuana leaf in a glass of milk next to two cookies
Marijuana leaf in a glass of milk next to two cookies

Image source: Getty Images.

Hold off the munchies and vapes

Canada will allow legal use of marijuana in several forms beginning on Oct. 17. These forms include dried cannabis, cannabis oil, and cannabis seeds. Notably absent from the list of what will be permitted, however, are cannabis edibles and cannabis concentrates.

The regulations for Canada's adult-use cannabis market established by Health Canada, the country's federal department overseeing public health matters, specifically left out edibles and concentrates used for vaping. Why? The agency felt that more time was needed "for the development of specific regulations to address the unique risks posed by these product classes."

Health Canada's thinking was that several aspects of cannabis edibles and concentrates required special regulations. Quality control, THC limits, portion sizes, and packaging/labeling were examples of areas where the department determined that edibles and concentrates were sufficiently different from dried cannabis, cannabis oil, and cannabis seeds to require more thought on regulatory requirements.

However, Health Canada did set a timetable for how much time should be allotted to finalizing these unique regulations. The agency expects to be ready for the legal sale of cannabis edibles and concentrates within one year of implementation of the Cannabis Act, also known as bill C-45. That means yet another legal marijuana market in Canada should be on the way in 2019.

Fast-growing and lucrative categories

How big could the Canadian market for cannabis edibles and concentrates be? Judging from what's happened in the U.S. so far, pretty big.

In Colorado, for example, cannabis edibles claimed a market share of 11% of the entire cannabis market in the state in the first quarter of 2014, according to data from BDS Analytics. Concentrates made up 13% of the total market. Fast-forward to 2017 Q4. The market share for edibles rose to 15%, while the market share for concentrates more than doubled to 29%. Meanwhile, the market share for dried cannabis in Colorado fell from 70% to 47% during the period.