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Tag: Dutch

The Dutch Medical Cannabis Industry Bands Together To Counter Misinformation

A new website, launched to counter myths in the industry, is being supported by the official Dutch medical supply chain. Why can’t this happen in other places?

Click on the website of the Institut of Medicinale Cannabis and you know you have encountered a “serious” website for the industry. For one thing, its sponsors are some of the best-known cannabis names both globally and more locally, starting with Bedrocan.

The second is that it translates to English smoothly.

All jokes aside, it is clear that the coalition of companies and non-profits behind the site mean business. Namely that they want to dispel myths about what medical cannabis is – and is not. Including the assertion that GMP grade (or pharmaceutical standard) cannabis is NOT like what you are likely to encounter in coffee shops.

It is an interesting campaign, coming as it does on the heels of a federal attempt to finally regulate the coffee shop grows domestically. And certainly, given the importance of Holland as the go-to source of exported cannabis (from Israel to Germany and the UK).

The information on the site is valid and necessary (indeed it is a wonder why the German industry has not done a similar thing yet). 

Regardless, it is a site that has its work cut out for it. 

To the average consumer, including patients, the concept of GMP is an amorphous one. So is the idea of “controlled dosing” – no matter how much that conversation is now absolutely in the room, and in a big way.

Medical or Recreational ish?

The reality is in Holland that this discussion is hard to have. That starts with the fact that the average patient, who, thanks to a reform in Dutch law as of 2017, cannot get their medical cannabis reimbursed via health insurance (as theoretically is possible at least in Germany next door). 

Faced with the prospect of potential mold or contaminants, or constant pain because GMP grade meds are either too expensive or too inconvenient (or both), it is not hard to understand that the average patient will find another safer source or grow themselves.

However, Holland is just a testing ground for what is about to start happening across the rest of Europe as both Luxembourg and Switzerland embark on their own recreational experiments. And as Germany re-examines the success (and many fails) so far of its medical one.

And as a result, this is a conversation if not party that at heart, is actually just getting started.

Be sure to book your tickets for the International Cannabis Business Conference when it returns to Berlin in August, 2021!

The Dutch Cannabis Tender Hits The Skids

Like the German medical cannabis tender bid before it, the Dutch government has run into a few problems rolling out a regulated industry across the country – and the first tender for cultivation has imploded

One thing is for sure. Governments find it very hard to roll out a federally controlled tender bid for the cultivation of cannabis. Everywhere.

Here is the thing the U.S., however, can take away from the following story. Don’t smirk – there is nothing about a state-driven licensed process on that side of the pond that is anywhere as complex if not complicated as doing it on this side of the Atlantic. And that is before the inevitable flubs and stupid politics get mixed in.

Here is the quick update. The first federally overseen Dutch attempt to finally regulate the cultivation of cannabis bound for domestic coffee shops (outside of major cities, which already decided to sit this out in favour of their own systems), has just hit formal skids.

Here is the upshot. The Dutch bid selections (9 rather than the initial expected 10 after one of these got disqualified) will all have to be reconsidered. Multiple errors in selecting winners, including leaving out the wishes of local councils, multiple entries by the same firm (this was a “lottery” after all) and other very unprofessional issues have all arisen in the last week as the bid was supposed to be decided. 

Even Dutch growers, and those who back them will concur that this was not only a highly foreseeable if not preventable situation. Not to mention the logic at work in reconfiguring the process is absolutely inescapable. Business plans as well as the disclosure of investor names are mandatory (for starters).

Unsurprisingly, the referees to all of this are circling wagons – but there is going to clearly be another bid redo in an environment where free wheeling cannapreneurial efforts are hitting the skids after being exposed to even the most minimal and logical regulatory muster.

In the meantime, enterprising firms interested in having their shot at a “little cannabis farm” in Holland should be aware that the decision process is far from over.

For an inside look at some of the most pressing regulatory, cultivation and tender bid issues in Europe, be sure to book your tickets to the International Cannabis Business Conference when it returns to Europe.

Dutch Cannabis Licensing Scheme Hits Local Protests

Plans to replace the production of blackberries with coffee-shop bound cannabis hit skids over NIMBYism at proposed grow sites for new Dutch licenses.

If it sounds like a scene straight out of a comedy, not to mention Colorado circa 2015 or so, just at a far lower altitude and probably still far more windmills, it is. The only problem is that it is also a tragedy. About lingering stigma, confusion, and more about the plant, if not its effects.

In these times of Covid, it also shows how this continued confusion has lasting effects – starting with jobs.

As the Dutch government proceeds with a pilot project to create ten licensed growers to supply the country’s coffee shops outside of big cities, it has run into its first major snag.

The residents of Etten-Leur, on the Belgian border, have trigged large local protests over a pending plan to replace blackberry crops with cannabis. There is now a request by the local mayor to the central government opposing the scheme. And the selection of the finalists for the 10 Dutch licenses has not even been decided yet.

The legal status of cannabis has everything to do with this. So far, Holland has not formally changed its national laws to legitimise the recreational cannabis industry. Indeed even this first trial as an attempt to do so has been opposed by its own large cities who maintain local controls on a still-flourishing industry.

The largest problem however now facing this model is larger scale, regulated cultivation. With Dutch residents now protesting the placement of larger corporate grows, the entire project may run into problems before it is ever rolled out.

Where To Grow New Canna Crops?

Holland produces a great deal of the medical cannabis flos that flows across the border to Germany – which has had its own ongoing problems with cannabis cultivation bids. Indeed, the first tender for medical cannabis, launched in the spring of 2017, has faced delay after delay in delivering domestically cultivated crops to German patients.

In Holland, the issue is already contentious – starting with the fact that the government could not even get cities to go along with a so-called “national plan.”

If smaller cities and municipalities also get into the act, the first licensing scheme for Holland, regulated on a federal level, will quickly fail.

For this reason, no matter how bad the news, it is also a step forward on the issue overall – in both Holland and the rest of Europe (see Luxembourg for starters).

Having a cannabis presence is one thing. Having a regulated cannabis industry is another.

And as American, if not Canadian communities learned long ago, the transition is always bumpy. For one reason or another. The good news, no matter the uncomfortable delays so far, is that it is happening at all

Be sure to book your tickets when the International Cannabis Business Conference returns to Europe this summer.

Dutch Officials Reversed A Decision To Force Cannabis Coffee Shops To Close

Dutch coffee shops are famous for serving cannabis. People have traveled from all over the world for multiple decades to Dutch coffee shops in order to purchase cannabis and enjoy the local culture. As with virtually everything right now, Dutch coffee shops are being affected by the spread of the coronavirus.

Initially, Dutch coffee shops were instructed to close out of caution, which led to the hoards of consumers lining up outside of the coffee shops to make one last purchase. Media coverage from around the world showed long lines of people waiting out in front of the shops.

That initial decision was reversed this week, with Dutch officials stating that the shops could remain open, albeit in a limited capacity. Per NOS:

Mayors already urged the cabinet today that the coffee shops should be allowed to open their counters again. They feared that the illegal drug street trade would flourish again due to the forced closure. So they hear their call.

Customers of takeaways and coffee shops are advised to avoid crowds. Also, the purchased items may not be consumed on the spot.

The decision comes in the same week that officials in San Francisco and New York in the United States deemed the cannabis industry to be ‘essential’ and dispensaries were allowed to remain open despite many other types of businesses being ordered to close.

While many people use cannabis for recreational purposes, many also use cannabis for purely medical purposes. For some of those patients, their only safe access to cannabis is via Dutch coffee shops, and from that standpoint, it’s great to see that people will continue to have that access.