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Canada’s government should regulate the production of cannabis when it is legalized for recreational use and require plain packaging for such products, an official panel has recommended, in a potential setback to growers who hoped to build brands.

How cannabis is sold should be left up to the provinces and should include both retail storefronts and a mail order system, the report recommended. Authorities have been battling a surge in illegal dispensaries over the past year, particularly in Ontario and British Columbia.

Medical marijuana is already legal in Canada, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government made legalizing marijuana for recreationa use a part of its successful election campaign last year and will introduce legislation in the spring of 2017.

Canada is following in the footsteps of some U.S. states that have already legalized recreational use, including Colorado and Washington. While Tuesday’s recommendations are not binding, the government said it will take them under consideration.

On the whole, the report was positive for the existing companies that currently produce and sell medical marijuana, analysts said, with a lower-than-expected age limit of 18 for buyers and the allowance of some forms of edibles, which have been popular in places such as Colorado, where marijuana is already legal.

Still, the panel recommended that plain packaging be required, while restrictions to advertising should be put in place similar to those currently on tobacco products.

“That’s where the downside is for some of these licensed producers that had been hoping to advertise and really develop brands,” said Jason Zandberg, an analyst who covers the industry for PI Financial.

Canopy Growth, which has a C$1.2bn ($914.98m)market capitalization on the main TSX exchange, was up 3.9% at C$10.39, after initially jumping as much as 8%.

Producer and seller Aphria Inc soared as much as 10% but similarly trimmed its gains and was up 3.6% at C$5.25.

Cannabis production should be regulated by the federal government, with licensing and production controls used to ensure a competitive system that includes small producers, the panel said, suggesting the door was open for new producers to get into the burgeoning sector.

There are currently 36 producers that have received a license to grow and sell marijuana under the medical framework, according to Health Canada. The panel recommended that Canada maintain a separate system for medical marijuana.

Whether storefronts operate through a government-run model, the way some alcohol is sold in Canada, or through private stores should be left up to the provinces, the report recommended.

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Mr.T posted:

This could be a new entrepreneurial opportunity for some Guyanese. Cain could make a killing. In-debt and personal knowledge of the product is vital in this trade.

LOL...but in all seriousness i do believe Guyana can make a killing with this stuff....especially if everyone puffing away in America and Canada.

V

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