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Gatineau company teams up with Molson Coors for new cannabis drinks

Outaouais cannabis company Hexo is partnering with Molson Coors to develop non-alcoholic, cannabis-infused drinks in Canada.

Drinkable cannabis products expected to be legal in 2019, says Molson Coors

A Quebec cannabis company is partnering with a well-known beer company to develop non-alcoholic cannabis beverages in Canada. (Nick Adams/Reuters)

Quebec-basedcannabis company Hexois partnering with Molson Coors to develop non-alcoholic, cannabis-infused drinks in Canada.

Theywill form a standalone company with its own board of directors and independent management. MolsonCoors will control 57.5 per cent of the unnamed venture, the company said in a news release.

Hexo will own the rest.

The established Hydropothecarymedical marijuana company recently renamed itself Hexo. While it will continue to use the Hydropothecarymoniker for its medical products, anything aimed to the recreational market will carry the new brand.

"There are some cannabis-infused drinks out in some of the illegal markets in the U.S." said Sbastien St-Louis, Hexo's CEO and co-founder.

"But nothing has ever been attempted to the level of quality that we're designing here in this partnership."

'Wellness' drinks

Industry experts have pointed to the stigma of smoking as one reason companies are developing smoke-free ways to consume cannabis once its recreational use is legal in Canada, as of Oct. 17.

St-Louis told CBC Radio's All In A Day thatthe new company's plans, however, go beyond simply offering customers a refreshing, relaxing beverage.

"We also intend to offer them experiences around wellness," he said.

"When you think about sports supplementation, reduced inflammation, when you think about diet drinks these are all things that we can introduce with the various molecules available in cannabis."

Sbastien St-Louis, seen here in 2017, is the CEO and co-founder of Gatineau cannabis company Hexo. The company has partnered with Molson Coors to brew a non-alcoholic, cannabis-infused beverage that will be made available once recreational marijuana is legal in Canada. (Laurie Trudel/Radio-Canada)

Shared values

Hexowas founded in 2013 in east Gatineauand is in the midst of an expansion that would eventually see it produce up to 108,000 kilograms of dried cannabis per year.

It is poisedto provide Quebec with 20,000 kilograms of cannabis products, including plants, sprays and powders, in the first year of legal sales.

The precise regulatory frameworkaround edible and drinkable cannabis products likely won't be in place until 2019, saidMolson Coorspresident and CEO FredericLandtmeters but he remainedconfident the joint venture with Hexo would be able to navigate those waters.

"We care a lot about responsibility, have always done so in the space of alcohol, [and] will continue to do so in the space of cannabis," Landtmeters toldAll In A Day.

"One of the things that has impressed us ... with Hexo is they really share that value."

The deal between Hexo andMolsonCoors isexpected to be finalized by the end of September.

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