Cannabis Storefronts Open in Canadian Retail Markets Six Months After Legalisation
Cannabis Storefronts Open in Canadian Retail Markets Six Months After Legalisation
Last October, Canada became only the second country -- and first G7 economy -- to legalize the recreational use of cannabis.

Ottawa: The first bricks and mortar retail cannabis stores opened in Ontario on Monday, attracting lineups of enthusiastic customers in Canada's largest pot market six months after legalisation.

In Toronto, dozens of people camped overnight outside of the city's only outlet, Hunny Pot Cannabis Co., while in Ottawa one customer, bundled up in a parka and knit cap, said he waited two hours in the cold to be the first in line at Fire and Flower.

"This is the opening of the retail market in Ontario, which is Canada's largest, so we have very high hopes for our flagship store in the province," Trevor Fencott, chief executive of Fire and Flower, told AFP.

"We're expecting brisk sales today," he said as customers poured in to its Byward Market location in downtown Ottawa.

The retailer, which has nine other storefronts in Alberta and Saskatchewan, partnered with a local accountant and a former salesman to break into the Ontario market.

Last October, Canada became only the second country -- and first G7 economy -- to legalize the recreational use of cannabis.

Over the past six months a patchwork of online portals and bricks and mortar stores have popped up across the country, as each province rolled out their own pot retailing framework.

In Quebec, there were huge lines outside government-run stores during the first few months of sales.

Ontario started selling cannabis through an online portal last October and a lottery was held in December for prospective pot shop owners. Only 10 of the winners were actually ready to open on time on Monday.

Eric Lavoie, who with partner Michael Patterson won a license to operate a cannabis store in Ottawa and sold a stake to Fire and Flower for shares in the company worth more than Can$1 million (US$750,000), said: "I've never won anything in my life like this, it's exciting." "If we sold out today we'd be very happy, but I think we have ample supply," he added, noting a nationwide supply crunch.

There is demand for more than 2,000 storefronts in Ontario, according to industry sources, but the province with a population of 14 million allowed just 25 to start.

Sales were orderly. A man in Toronto who smoked a joint in line was turned away at the counter because he was intoxicated.

Some expressed sticker shock. Prices for legal cannabis are nearly double the rates on the black market, according to the government statistical agency.

"It's very difficult to see my generation, who have grown up with the grey market, transitioning to this price point," Ben Schilling, who paid Can$129 for 10.5 grams of pot, told the Toronto Star.

Fencott acknowledged that pricing is "certainly a challenge," but added that fresh supplies coming soon should put downward pressure on prices.

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