Nanaimo-based medical marijuana company first to cultivate product outside Canada - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 10, 2024, 11:15 PM | Calgary | 0.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Nanaimo-based medical marijuana company first to cultivate product outside Canada

Medical marijuana producer Tilray will begin construction of a greenhouse and processing facility in Portugal next month becoming the first Canadian company to receive a licence to cultivate outside the country.

Tilray gets licence to grow in Portugal, invests $30M in new greenhouse facilities

'Portugal has the ideal climate to cultivate cannabis,' said Tilray CEO Brendan Kennedy. (Tilray)

Medical marijuana producer Tilray will begin construction of a greenhouse and processing facility in Portugal next month becoming the first Canadian company to cultivate outside of the country.

The Portuguese government granted the licence to Tilraywho will invest $30 million Cdnto build their European Union headquarters. Tilray plans to distribute pot and pot-derived medical products to patients, pharmacies and researchers not only in Portugal but throughout Europe.

"It's more environmentally-friendly and cost-effective to supply European patients from Portugal than from northern climates," said Tilray CEO Brendan Kennedy

"Portugal has the ideal climate to cultivate cannabis, a highly-skilled health care workforceand a vibrant research community."

Tilroy was established in Nanaimo, B.C., three years ago and has grown at a dizzying rate. It started with six employees and now employs over 200people in sevencountries.

Tilray's facility in Portugal. The company will begin construction of a new green house and processing plant next month (Tilray)

"We export now from Canada to half a dozen countries and will export to half a dozen more over the next sixmonths," said Kennedy.

To keep up with growing demand, the company announced last month that it would also expand its Canadian operationswith a new 13 acre greenhouse on 100 acres of property in southern Ontario.

"I think a lot of doctors, a lot of patients and a lot of researchers are extremely enthusiastic about replacing traditional pharmaceuticals with products that contain derivatives of cannabis in their formulations," said Kennedy.

Tilraywon't be producing pot for the recreational market when it becomes legal in Canada July 2018. The focus appears to be continued expansion in the EU.

"We see up to 10 million patients over the next decade emerging within the EU. And that market will be a 30 to 40 billion dollar market."