Berliner Boersenzeitung - High stakes for weed growers amid slow NY legalization rollout

EUR -
AED 4.166276
AFN 79.107146
ALL 99.085019
AMD 435.747022
ANG 2.03006
AOA 1040.726702
ARS 1343.022849
AUD 1.763138
AWG 2.043185
AZN 1.929436
BAM 1.966418
BBD 2.291272
BDT 138.668755
BGN 1.954884
BHD 0.427596
BIF 3377.738415
BMD 1.134315
BND 1.463301
BOB 7.84134
BRL 6.426573
BSD 1.134828
BTN 97.036954
BWP 15.303633
BYN 3.713652
BYR 22232.570848
BZD 2.279408
CAD 1.567305
CDF 3249.812346
CHF 0.934006
CLF 0.027754
CLP 1065.041942
CNY 8.171945
CNH 8.157703
COP 4685.287443
CRC 577.71945
CUC 1.134315
CUP 30.059343
CVE 110.863618
CZK 24.917523
DJF 201.590284
DKK 7.459753
DOP 67.001782
DZD 150.138857
EGP 56.449515
ERN 17.014723
ETB 154.145925
FJD 2.562927
FKP 0.842731
GBP 0.841877
GEL 3.108338
GGP 0.842731
GHS 11.688111
GIP 0.842731
GMD 81.670524
GNF 9832.089287
GTQ 8.715058
GYD 237.419293
HKD 8.89372
HNL 29.566648
HRK 7.530379
HTG 148.310818
HUF 403.854625
IDR 18509.012241
ILS 3.980124
IMP 0.842731
INR 96.921875
IQD 1486.52664
IRR 47783.01266
ISK 144.159939
JEP 0.842731
JMD 180.791781
JOD 0.804244
JPY 163.234145
KES 146.496907
KGS 99.195536
KHR 4543.533233
KMF 492.854754
KPW 1020.768431
KRW 1566.182839
KWD 0.348004
KYD 0.945706
KZT 576.985487
LAK 24513.362195
LBP 101676.009133
LKR 339.664048
LRD 226.955467
LSL 20.259493
LTL 3.349336
LVL 0.686136
LYD 6.21676
MAD 10.501528
MDL 19.671217
MGA 5158.855725
MKD 61.495716
MMK 2381.889741
MNT 4055.457655
MOP 9.16368
MRU 44.92558
MUR 51.906057
MVR 17.53624
MWK 1967.785962
MXN 21.912785
MYR 4.814016
MZN 72.493369
NAD 20.259493
NGN 1803.68559
NIO 41.755463
NOK 11.507403
NPR 155.25431
NZD 1.898324
OMR 0.436135
PAB 1.134727
PEN 4.13171
PGK 4.726668
PHP 63.116704
PKR 320.007209
PLN 4.240692
PYG 9067.239182
QAR 4.136362
RON 5.053831
RSD 117.214422
RUB 87.227014
RWF 1604.362908
SAR 4.255286
SBD 9.472399
SCR 16.127178
SDG 681.157308
SEK 10.867559
SGD 1.462557
SHP 0.891393
SLE 25.771455
SLL 23786.015263
SOS 648.501645
SRD 42.203332
STD 23478.026999
SVC 9.929616
SYP 14748.050048
SZL 20.249338
THB 37.096648
TJS 11.319771
TMT 3.975774
TND 3.405287
TOP 2.656676
TRY 44.507735
TTD 7.707618
TWD 33.867237
TZS 3042.799894
UAH 47.113246
UGX 4125.274808
USD 1.134315
UYU 47.16467
UZS 14560.621439
VES 107.585821
VND 29488.215717
VUV 136.960056
WST 3.055083
XAF 659.51813
XAG 0.034297
XAU 0.000344
XCD 3.065542
XDR 0.816426
XOF 659.538591
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.602946
ZAR 20.237572
ZMK 10210.195254
ZMW 30.105558
ZWL 365.248915
  • CMSD

    0.0600

    22.11

    +0.27%

  • BCC

    1.1200

    87.85

    +1.27%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    22.09

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0700

    10.36

    +0.68%

  • BCE

    0.3400

    21.5

    +1.58%

  • RIO

    0.2500

    60.2

    +0.42%

  • BTI

    -0.1200

    44.97

    -0.27%

  • AZN

    0.4900

    70.87

    +0.69%

  • NGG

    -0.1000

    72.57

    -0.14%

  • GSK

    0.8200

    40

    +2.05%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    12.78

    +0.31%

  • RBGPF

    -0.2380

    65.43

    -0.36%

  • BP

    0.2300

    29.17

    +0.79%

  • RYCEF

    0.0500

    11.58

    +0.43%

  • RELX

    -1.1200

    53.93

    -2.08%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    10.34

    -0.48%

High stakes for weed growers amid slow NY legalization rollout
High stakes for weed growers amid slow NY legalization rollout / Photo: Cecilia SANCHEZ - AFP

High stakes for weed growers amid slow NY legalization rollout

When New York authorities gave him a license to cultivate cannabis in the spring of 2022, Marcos Ribeiro thought he'd hit the big time.

Text size:

Since then his plants have flowered, but like other producers he has amassed a stockpile which still he hopes to sell.

In a greenhouse in Long Island, two hours from Manhattan's gleaming skyscrapers, Ribeiro was surrounded by hundreds of leafy, pungent plants, each of which can produce pounds worth of flowers, tending to a harvest of "Blue Dream" strain.

"It's a West Coast variety, very popular. It's a good daytime smoke... It's desirable because a lot of people nowadays look for sativa. They don't want to get sleepy," Ribeiro, the 40-year-old son of Portuguese immigrants, said with a smile, surrounded by his verdant crop.

But for now, business has been less fruitful than Ribeiro had hoped.

Ribeiro, who grew up in the area, has sunk hundreds of thousands of dollars into his enterprise in the two years since recreational cannabis consumption was legalized in New York -- but the official market which appeared set to boom has been beset by problems.

"It's been a lot of money, it's been a lot of time. And then we said we're gonna go all in, like playing poker and then grew all this cannabis -- and with no stores to sell it to," he said. "Kind of heartbreaking."

He is not alone, with more than 200 other growing sites listed in the state -- but only 23 stores licensed to sell marijuana in the sprawling region of 20 million people.

"They're potentially sitting on a lot of product that they grow, that they will not be able to move into the market," said Andrew Rosner, a cofounder of the Cannabis Association of New York.

- 'Enormous fiscal strain' -

"(This) could end up placing enormous fiscal strain on their businesses."

According to another industry body, The Cannabis Farmers Alliance, losses could amount to several million dollars in the worst cases.

More than half of all US states have legalized recreational and medicinal cannabis use, including New York, which adopted an ambitious plan to ensure that users, over 21, would be able to smoke quality controlled and traceable pot.

The plan was for retail licenses to be earmarked for those who had prior convictions for cannabis offenses, in an effort to redress historic judicial burdens that often fell disproportionately on African-American and Hispanic communities.

Among other bureaucratic delays, a court in August halted the opening of any new cannabis stores, following a complaint by US military veterans who alleged discrimination because they weren't given the same opportunity as the ex-convicts.

The Democratic-controlled state last month finally reached a settlement with the veterans, clearing the way for the approved stores to open.

"We are targeting licensing 1,000 or more retail dispensaries over the coming weeks and months," said John Kagia, policy director at the Office of Cannabis Management, a local government body.

- 'Sitting in these jars' -

"Part of the reason we are being so aggressive is precisely because we wanted to get that (financial) relief to our cultivators."

Since decriminalization, New York City has been even more perfumed than previously with the unmistakable sweet smell of cannabis, sold more or less clandestinely in plentiful unlicensed shops amid the slow rollout of legal retail.

To avoid wasting his first crops, Ribeiro changed up. Instead of selling plants for smoking, he brought in a certified processor to convert his plants into THC oil, the psychoactive substance used to make edible cannabis gummies.

David Falkowski, another Long Island grower, keeps the copper-colored oil -- which can be used for cannabis drinks, lotions, vaporizer liquid and more in large jars -- secured behind mesh wire in a prefab building on his farm.

Falkowski, a 46-year-old with locks tied back in a bun, comes from a farming family and has always grown vegetables -- but shifting into cannabis, the soothing properties of which he swears by, was a matter of "survival."

And yet, "the vast majority of our crop is sitting in these jars," he said.

"We can make 10,000 packages of gummies or more out of each jar. But if we're only selling 1,000 a month, and we're only making a few dollars per package profit, we need more retail to get the volume up to where we can actually survive."

"The idea was to add another option for income stream," Falkowski said. "Right now, we're not seeing that -- we're seeing an (outgoing) stream."

(S.G.Stein--BBZ)