Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

Cannabis Edibles, Extracts And Topicals Available Soon In B.C.

Darpan News Desk, 19 Dec, 2019 09:44 PM

    The Province is now distributing new categories of legal non-medical cannabis products.


    This begins the second phase of available products since legalization began in October 2018.


    The Liquor Distribution Branch (LDB) received its first shipments of products under the new categories on Dec. 18, 2019, and has made them available to private and public retailers throughout the province via its wholesale customer portal. Consumers can expect to see these products on legal retail store shelves in late December, in accordance with LDB’s shipping schedules.


    The LDB, the sole wholesale distributor of non-medical cannabis in British Columbia, has registered more than 260 individual products that are within the new categories of edibles, extracts and topicals to make up its initial wholesale product assortment. However, only a small number are expected to be available for retail sale within the first few months of 2020. Availability of products is dependent upon a number of factors, including the ability of manufacturers to meet demand from other markets across Canada.


    “The addition of edibles, extracts and topicals represents the provincial government’s commitment to providing safe, regulated non-medical cannabis products to B.C. consumers,” said Blain Lawson, LDB’s general manager and CEO. “A lot of work has gone into procuring these products, and we look forward to working with our suppliers as they continue to introduce new products to market.”


    New products registered within the initial release include:

    beverages, such as carbonated and non-carbonated drinks, tea bags, oils and powders;

    products intended to be eaten, such as chocolate, cookies, soft chews and mints;

    vaporizers and cartridges;

    other extracts, such as shatter and hashish; and

    topicals, defined as cannabis-infused products intended to be applied to the hair, skin or nails.


    Oils and capsules, which were included in products legalized on Oct. 17, 2018, are now reclassified as extracts. For information about regulations related to the manufacture of non-medical cannabis products and THC limits per product, visit Health Canada’s website: https://www.canada.ca/en/health-canada/services/drugs-medication/cannabis/resources/regulations-edible-cannabis-extracts-topicals.html


    Products in these newly legalized categories will have the same plain, Health Canada-approved packaging and labeling requirements that are in place for existing cannabis products on the adult-use market. They must be contained in a child-proof package that bears the cannabis symbol, health warnings related to consumption, and the THC and CBD content of the product.


    Twenty-four licensed producers have committed to supplying products under the new categories, initially. The LDB will continue to expand its variety of wholesale products as licensed producers make new products available and Health Canada licenses new producers. The LDB is currently working with more than 40 licensed producers to form its entire wholesale product assortment.


    The provincial government recently passed legislation increasing the provincial sales tax (PST) on vapour products from 7% to 20% beginning Jan. 1, 2020. The new tax rate will be applied at the point of retail sale to all vaping devices and substances used with the vaping device, as well as to any vaping part or accessory. Buying legally from licensed, private non-medical cannabis retail outlets and government-run BC Cannabis Stores is the only way to ensure that a product is regulated by Health Canada.


    Dry herb vaporizers (e.g. vaporizers used with dry cannabis) will remain subject to the 7% PST rate.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Loblaws Off The Hook For Rana Plaza Disaster; Bangladeshi Lawsuit Fails

    TORONTO - One of the country's largest retailers is finally off the hook for the devastating collapse of a garment factory in Bangladesh six years ago.

    Loblaws Off The Hook For Rana Plaza Disaster; Bangladeshi Lawsuit Fails

    More Crews Sent To B.C.'s Southern Okanagan Wildfire As Weather Shift Possible

    More Crews Sent To B.C.'s Southern Okanagan Wildfire As Weather Shift Possible
    The added staff bolsters a crew of 100 that has been working around the clock on the blaze which broke out Sunday.

    More Crews Sent To B.C.'s Southern Okanagan Wildfire As Weather Shift Possible

    Canadian Food Supplies At Risk If Climate Change Not Slowed, New UN Report Shows

    Canadian Food Supplies At Risk If Climate Change Not Slowed, New UN Report Shows
    OTTAWA - Canada will not be spared the impact of food shortages and price shocks if global warming is not kept below 2 degrees Celsius, a new report suggests.

    Canadian Food Supplies At Risk If Climate Change Not Slowed, New UN Report Shows

    Northern Manitoba Community Searching For Answers After Massive Manhunt Ends

    The deputy mayor of a northern Manitoba community at the centre of a massive manhunt says it will be a long time before things return to normal.

    Northern Manitoba Community Searching For Answers After Massive Manhunt Ends

    Munk Leaders' Debate Proposed For Oct. 1

    The Munk Debates launched a website today inviting Canadians to write to the Liberals, Conservatives, NDP and Greens to urge their leaders to participate in a debate in Toronto on Oct. 1.

    Munk Leaders' Debate Proposed For Oct. 1

    B.C. Homicides: Hunt For Fugitives Ends As Bodies Of Kam McLeod And Bryer Schmegelsky Found, Claim RCMP

    Police in Manitoba believe they have found the bodies of the two B.C. fugitives, Kam McLeod and Bryer Schmegelsky, in northern Manitoba.

    B.C. Homicides: Hunt For Fugitives Ends As Bodies Of Kam McLeod And Bryer Schmegelsky Found, Claim RCMP