Canada: Testing finds contaminants in illegal cannabis

Results that nobody can be surprised by but always useful to have a record of the facts. More jurisdictions should be testing and publicizing illegal cannabis results to help consumers further understand what an unregulated market means.

Here’s the BC Govt report

Testing of cannabis seized from illicit retailers in B.C. has found that many samples contained contaminants that would not be allowed in the legal cannabis market.

“My message to people who choose to consume cannabis is simple: buy from legal sellers whose regulated product is subject to national requirements that are in place to protect you,” said Mike Farnworth, Minister of Public Safety and Solicitor General. “In addition to the potential health risks, if you buy illegal cannabis, you could also be supporting organized criminal operations that pose a danger to our communities.”

As part of a pilot study, the B.C. Cannabis Secretariat sent 20 dried cannabis samples, seized by the provincial Community Safety Unit from illicit retailers in the Metro Vancouver region, to a federally licensed analytical testing lab in February 2021. Twenty-four distinct pesticides were found in the illicit cannabis samples, along with unacceptable levels of bacteria, fungi, lead and arsenic.

The frequency and variety of contaminants identified indicate that some growers producing for the illicit market may be engaging in practices that pose risks to both consumers and employees handling cannabis.

Cannabis products from licensed producers are strictly regulated to ensure they are fit for human consumption. They must meet federal regulations, including mandatory testing for the presence of solvent residues and contaminants such as pesticides, fungi, bacteria and heavy metals. In contrast, very little is known about the quality of cannabis sold on the illicit market or production practices used by unlicensed growers in Canada.

The secretariat carried out the pilot study with assistance from the BC Centre for Disease Control and the National Collaborating Centre for Environmental Health. The latter has authored a blog post, Unregulated Cannabis: Risky Production Practices Raise Concern for Consumers, which discusses the test results.

Learn More:

National Collaborating Centre for Environmental Health blog post: https://ncceh.ca/content/blog/unregulated-cannabis-risky-production-practices-raise-concern-consumers

Link to cannabis testing results: http://cannabis.gov.bc.ca/app/uploads/sites/397/2021/06/2021-Illicit-Cannabis-Testing-Results-_MBlabs.pdf

Get Cannabis Clarity: https://cannabis.gov.bc.ca/

Cannabis laws in B.C.: https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/safety/public-safety/cannabis

Industry roles and responsibilities under the Cannabis Act: https://www.canada.ca/en/health-canada/services/drugs-medication/cannabis/resources/roles-responsibilities-under-cannabis-act.html

For translations, visit: http://news.gov.bc.ca/releases/2021PSSG0050-001115#translations

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