This Blog is about Cannabis, marijuana, weed, ganja.
Monday, 1 April 2019
The battle to legalize cannabis in Spain
The
country has some of the world’s most active research teams looking into
the drug, but it is still illegal for medicinal and recreational
purposes. The value of the global industry is set to grow to around €50
billion – is there a risk that Spanish players could miss out?
Jesús Rodríguez
Like Bill Clinton, most people have smoked the odd joint. And perhaps
like Barack Obama, they’ve even inhaled. After all, cannabis has been
around for more than 4,000 years and thrives all over the planet. It was
not used for medicinal purposes until well into the 20th century. And
in 1961, it was deemed by the United Nations Single Convention on
Narcotic Drugs to be as dangerous as heroin.
Around 113 cannabinoids have been identified in a cannabis plant.
These themselves are composed of a hundred different substances, most of
which have not yet been put under the microscope.
Decades of
stigmatization has meant the plant has received little research, unlike
opioids, which have been heavily studied and whose medicinal use in the
US has led to a myriad of addictions and 60,000 deaths a year – more
than the number of US casualties in the Vietnam War.
Paradoxically, Spain has some of the world’s most active research
teams looking into cannabis, even though it is still illegal for
medicinal and recreational purposes. Neither the current government of
Socialist Party (PSOE) Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez or any of its
predecessors have shown the slightest inclination to regulate the drug.
Nor has there ever been significant pressure on politicians to do so,
either from within parliament or without. A parliamentary commission for
the drug’s legal status supported by the anti-austerity party Podemos
and center-right Cuidadanos never got off the ground in Congress.
Meanwhile, the medicinal properties of cannabis are being recognized
internationally and there is an undeniable change in how it is being
perceived.
Consuming cannabis is the most frequently broken law in our country
Manuel Guzmán, professor of Biochemistry at the Complutense University of Madrid
While cannabis has still not been rigorously researched, thanks to
Israeli chemist Raphael Mechoulam we do know it has two main active
properties – THC, which is responsible for the high and CBD, which is
responsible for medicinal pain relief. “The balance between the two is
key to the consumer’s sense of well-being. This is what avoids a
psychotic episode, which is the riskiest aspect of cannabis as there is
no danger of death from overdose as there is with morphine,” says Manuel
Guzmán, professor of Biochemistry at the Madrid Complutense University
and a leading expert on cannabis.
Carlos Spottorno
“When you consume it, you need to know what you are taking, what
variety, in what quantity and to be aware of where it has come from as
well as what side effects it can have. And that all comes with strict
regulation – with a standard product that is safe, controlled, well
packaged and labeled, and of pharmaceutical quality. [...] Consuming cannabis
is the most frequently broken law in our country.
The person who gets
it on the black market and doesn’t know what they are consuming is
taking a big risk. I mean patients – the 120,000 people in Spain with
multiple sclerosis, epilepsy, cancer and chronic pain that self dose,
not to mention the thousands who would like to do so. They need the best
but they are being denied it while prescriptions for opioids, which
kill, are being handed out.”
The growing legalization of cannabis (it is legal in Canada and in 33 US states,
and is increasingly used for therapeutic purposes in EU countries such
as Italy, Portugal and Germany) has given rise to a powerful
international industry that is expected to generate €50 billion in 2025 –
€5 million of which will be in Spain.
Naturally, this potential has not gone unnoticed by investors and in
the past five years cannabis has shed its hippy associations and is now
listed on the stock exchange with shares valued above many of Spain’s
Ibex 35 companies. Big distribution, food, drink, tobacco,
pharmaceutical software, biotechnology and fertilizer corporations –
from Coca Cola and Pernod, to Philip Morris are jockeying for position
to get a slice of the pie.
Nobody wants to miss out on what is being referred to as “the green
rush.” This is not about shifty dealers in local squares selling hash
that has been smuggled across borders. It is the advent of a spanking
new economic sector, encompassing both medicinal and recreational uses
that has 75 million legal consumers – the UN estimates that there are
more than 200 million consumers in total – and is starting to draw on
the expertise of geneticists, chemists, logistics operators,
accountants, lawyers, lobbies and investors. Forget the dope heads, this
is now the domain of the suits.
Manuel Guzmán, professor of Biochemistry at the Complutense University of Madrid.Carlos Spottorno
Opportunity abounds. For a start, demand needs to be met and
management teams and professionals need to be equipped with skills
regarding everything from cultivation to distribution. Investors believe
it will be the biggest news in markets since online shopping giant
Amazon broke onto the scene.
This turnabout has been largely helped by the legalization of
cannabis in Canada in October, 2018.
Canada is the first country to
legalize both its medicinal and recreational use since Uruguay did so in
2013. The difference is that Canada is an icon of progressive thinking.
It also has one of the biggest GDPs in the world and belongs to the G8.
Of the 37 million people living there, five million consume cannabis,
and the industry is already generating around €6 billion. In comparison
to Uruguay, its regulatory model is more focused on business and tax
revenue. This model is also being used in the US, where cannabis for
medicinal purposes is legal in 33 states with 10 more, including
Washington DC, making it legal for recreational purposes too. Today, the cannabis industry employs 160,000 people in the United States.
The leader of Podemos, Pablo Iglesias, whose political party is in favor of legalization.Carlos Spottorno
Canada has wasted no time in setting up an industry based on Norway’s
approach to oil. “It’s about expertise and patents – there are already
600 in this business,” says Eduardo Muñoz, professor of Immunology and
founder of VivaCell, a small biotech company that researches the
pharmaceutical potential of cannabis in degenerative diseases, which has
since been bought up by Emerald, a Canadian cannabis multinational.
In the space of five years, Canada has accumulated 20 corporations
that cover every aspect of the business, ranging from the scientific to packaging the purified extract in capsules or flowers and its subsequent distribution via chemists, clubs or web pages.
And all this in the hands of a clutch of multinationals – the new
oligopolies that create new botanical varieties, which are rigorously
registered and which have even become subject to industrial espionage.
These companies acquire the harvested cannabis from farms in Colombia, Malta, Greece, Syria and Portugal, Andalusia and Murcia,
not to mention China, which has plantations the size of 10,000 soccer
fields. They are also preparing for the legalization for recreational
use in other countries, as the medicinal market accounts for only a
third of the whole.
Cannabis is destined to become the business of the century and the
tobacco and alcohol industries will help that happen by providing the
distribution channels as well as the marketing and publicity expertise,
the design tools and the know-how when it comes to effectively lobbying
politicians.
A researcher from the Cannabinoid Signaling Group.Carlos Spottorno
Spain, however, is being left on the sidelines. “We could have
Europe’s main plantation here and be the California of the south,” says
Pedro Pérez, president of the La Santa cannabis association in Madrid,
which has had a number of run-ins with police, particularly after the
Supreme Court and the Constitutional Court passed a series of laws
between 2015 and 2018 that aimed to stamp out cannabis-consumer
associations. “We know how to do it, we have the sun, the tradition and
the best seed banks and our associations have put forward the example,
with implicit support for responsible regulation, but we are stuck in
prohibition. It could be a lost opportunity.”
The most powerful global cannabis company is Canopy, founded in
Canada in 2014, which now has a market value of more than €15 billion.
Its main shareholder is the US drinks company Constellation. Now Canopy
has a monopoly in the EU with a range of agreements and acquisitions in
Spain, Germany, Denmark and the Czech Republic. After Canopy comes
Tilray with links to the pharmaceutical company Novartis and shares held
by the world’s biggest beer company, Anheuser-Busch InBev. Then there
is Aurora Cannabis, the leader in marijuana production, with 500 tons
harvested a year, followed by Cronos which has shares held by Altria,
the owner of Marlboro.
In behind come another dozen companies, none
valued at less than €1 billion.
The products offered are a far cry from what we associate with the
established weed culture. This is a new generation of products
manufactured in a laboratory – the result of genetic crop engineering,
with plants crossed from all over the world to create resistant,
productive and potent hybrids with the best smell and taste. They are
then patented. Some are engineered to have THC levels high enough to
blow your socks off and others with CBD levels designed for therapeutic
punch.
Now, instead of green-fingered hippies working outside the system, we
have a new breed of professional – the so-called “breeders.” They are
wooed by industrial oligarchs and generously rewarded for their efforts.
The breeders produce cannabis according to market demand – be that a
cheap, basic product for the general public or a gourmet variety for the
connoisseur.
“I am trying to be the [renowned winery] Vega Sicilia of marijuana,”
says grower Sergio González, head of the cannabis association Nuestra
Señora del Agua in Zaragoza and president of the Responsible Regulation
platform, inspired by Madrid lawyer Bernardo Soriano, which lobbies for
the legalization of cannabis.
We have to establish a social economic model in Spain that benefits everyone, not just Wall Street
Sergio González, 35, weed grower
Sergio González is 35 years old has a Rasputin-style beard. He
studied telecommunications and worked at Google and has been cultivating
cannabis since the age of 17. Surrounded by dozens of new varieties, he
smokes rosin, one of the purest extracts of cannabis that has an 80%
concentration of THC, enough to floor an elephant. He produces it
himself. “I have a business profile,” he says.
“And I am working toward
making this professional. When it comes to regulation, we have know-how
in Spain that no one else possesses. We come from an area where it is
illegal, but we are indispensable [...] because the cannabis
corporations need to respond to a demand that is escaping them and they
don’t know how to do it.
“The same thing is going to happen here as happened with tech
companies and hackers, who had no formal training but had the interest,
passion and practical know-how and knew all the tricks,” he adds. “And
in the end, [Spanish telecommunication company] Telefónica and other
multinationals had to hire their old enemies for a lot of money. The
same thing is happening with our seed banks in Barcelona or Málaga, with
20-odd growers such as Positronics Seeds or CBD Crew going from legal
limbo to having a turnover of between €10 and €20 million and
representing a third of the global seed market. Spain could become the
world’s greenhouse.”
Future of cannabis in Spain
“Ninety percent of what is sold in the coffee shops in Holland comes from Granada, Almería, Murcia and Catalonia. And what is sold in Uruguay is developed here.
And in Germany, where there is no production capacity, they are waiting
for our marijuana. There are vast illegal plantations in Spain, from a
dozen hectares in Teruel to 25,000 to 30,000 plants on hillsides and in
abandoned warehouses.
There are people who have their rent and
electricity bills paid in exchange for growing. The business is here but
we have to hurry because the problem will be that the pharmaceutical
companies get it. We have to establish a social economic model in Spain
that benefits everyone, not just Wall Street.”
Different kinds of cannabis for therapeutic use.Carlos Spottorno
So how should we regulate cannabis in Spain?
Should we make civil rights our reference point or make it purely a
business proposition? With an eye on tax income from the industry, a
report by David Pere Martínez Oró, coordinator of the Drugs Policy Unit
at the Autonomous University of Barcelona, estimates that Spain could
make €3.3 billion in taxes and social security payments from the
cannabis industry – more than the health budget of the Castilla-La
Mancha region.
While Podemos is the only political party in favor of medicinal and recreational regulation,
its party leader Pablo Iglesias is not about to be snapped smoking a
joint any time soon, though he does admit to having done so as a
student. “It didn’t make me feel good,” he says. “I prefer a couple of
beers.
But I’m not proud of that. People who prefer alcohol have no
lessons to teach those who prefer marijuana. Smoking a joint is like
going to a bar and having a drink. It’s the same thing.”
Curiously, Iglesias is more focused on the economic arguments in
favor of legalization. “I have no doubt that it will be regulated,
particularly if we manage to have a joint government with Pedro Sánchez
after the elections,” he says, in reference to the snap general election
called for April 28.
“It’s a cross-party matter that might also include
Cuidadanos. Legalization for medicinal purposes is justice. The problem
now is whether we do it before other countries. We have to do it now!
If we are ready, Spain could receive huge operating and tax revenues.
That money would be taken from the drug dealers. And it would allow the
police to focus on other things. Spain could become the Canada of Europe
– a benchmark. And achieving this could be beneficial for everyone, not
just four pharmaceutical millionaires.”
An indoor crop.Carlos Spottorno
The current government, with Sánchez at the helm, does not seem to
have the matter as clear as Iglesias. In fact, legalization has not
featured in its plans at all. When asked by Cuidadanos about the
prospect of legalization for medicinal purposes in parliament recently,
the government answered that the scientific evidence was “insufficient,
we are awaiting a conclusion from the World Health Organization (WHO) on
the matter.”
Nothing was said about recreational regulation. And concerning
medicinal use, the government has stuck to the negative view of the
Spanish Medical Agency (AEMPS) – one of the administration’s
least-transparent entities – which is against the prescribed therapeutic use of cannabis
in the form of flowers or extracts. This is not the same as the half a
dozen medicines based on cannabis, only one of which – Sativex – has
been approved in Spain. It is used by people with multiple sclerosis and
is produced by the UK multinational GW Pharma, costing in the realm of
€30,000 a year per patient.
With a staff of 600, AEMPS can be found in an anonymous building on
the outskirts of Madrid. The person in charge is pharmacist María Jesús
Lamas. “Our job is to determine the benefit/risk ratio of each new
medicine that we receive for examination, which means deciding whether
the benefits outweigh the side-effects,” she says. “None of the main
active ingredients of cannabis have shown in clinical trials to be
better than their pharmaceutical counterparts. More trials are needed.
Cannabis lacks scientific evidence. And it doesn’t have the necessary quality, safeguards or effectiveness.”
Cannabis lacks scientific evidence. And it doesn’t have the necessary quality, safeguards or effectiveness
María Jesús Lamas, pharmacist at the Medicines Agency
When reminded that Germany regulated cannabis for medicinal purposes a year ago,
Lamas replies: “They can do what they like. But its effectiveness has
not been evaluated objectively, measurably, quantifiably and in a way
that can be reproduced. Something that makes you feel better does not
necessarily have to be a medicine. [...] There is no scientific evidence
that justifies making cannabis a medicine. We are a technical body. The
government in power is the one that decides.”
End of story. The meeting is over. But the paradox is that, while the
AEMPS frowns on the medicinal use of cannabis, in October 2016, it
authorized the cultivation of cannabis to be exported for therapeutic
use to a Spanish company with a long history of producing opioids for pharmaceuticals.
It is the biggest poppy-growing company in the world, which turns the
flower into derived opium products. Its presence in the cannabis sector
is significant. It started out in 1934, just importing and transforming
opium, but by 1973 it had become an all-encompassing outfit, managing
everything from the cultivation to the distribution of the end-product.
Today, it produces a third of the world’s morphine. It is called
Alcaliber and millionaire Juan Abelló was behind its success.
At 78, Abelló does not give interviews. But the company’s CEO José
Antonio de la Puente agrees to speak. De la Puente is a financial lawyer
and, sporting an immaculate bespoke suit, his approach is polished and
professional.
Joints in a cannabis club.Carlos Spottorno
Alcaliber no longer belongs to Abelló. It is now in the hands of the
British investment fund GHO Capital, which works out of the Cayman
Islands and specializes in pharmaceutical investments.
However, the day
he sold Alcaliber to GHO Capital, Abelló founded Linneo Health that owns
the only license issued by the AEMPS to cultivate and produce cannabis
in Spain; a veritable gold mine.
In September, 2017, it had already come to an agreement with the
Canadian multinational Canopy to supply it for three years with raw
material and an extract of the main active ingredient for pharmaceutical
use. “This is a natural evolution for our company; it’s another line of
business,” explains De la Puente. “We have always supplied big
laboratories. We exported more than 90%.
We are the most important
opiates company globally and now we are going to achieve the same thing
with cannabis. The challenge we face is to turn this plant with its
pharmaceutical properties into a standard for the industry, destined for
Germany, Canada and the US; and in the future, to put these extracts
into spray or capsule form ourselves – developing different varieties
and controlling the entire process.”
The mystery is how Linneo Health has managed to get a license to grow
cannabis in Spain from the Medical Agency when more than 100 applicants
have been turned down in the past two or three years and companies like
Phytoplant have placed on a waiting list.
“We are an industrial pharmaceutical company, not an agricultural
company, and there are many of those in the sector,” says De la Puente.
“We are an industrial company that has plantations. We already have a
greenhouse the size of eight soccer pitches. But to be a player in this
business, you need extremely good quality. And we have that. It is a
very regulated business, very discreet because you are working with an
atypical product. We have the experience and we have the teams. And we
know how to do it, applying high quality pharmaceutical criteria, rubber
stamped by the Good Manufacturing Practices. We are five years ahead of
our competitors. We are playing in a different league.”
Grower Sergio González.Carlos Spottorno
In March 2018, Linneo Health received 1,500 clones from Canopy. They
arrived in discreet containers with regulated light and temperature. The
company has had its first harvest and is now in the process of
extraction and purification at its plant in Toledo, in central Spain.
“At the end of this year, we will be ready to offer our client a valid
and standardized product. The best cannabis,” says De la Puente.
Linneo Health’s client is not exactly Canopy but a German offshoot
called Spektrum that distributes medicinal cannabis. In the next three
years, Linneo Health will learn the business and Germany will provide a
market subsidized by the state’s healthcare budget with a predicted one
million consumers a year. Germany has established a Cannabis Agency that
selects companies to grow for them under strict guidelines. And
according to the director, Werner Knöss, the agency will also monitor
the growing process as well as the production, harvest, quality control,
packaging and distribution.
“Only cannabis of pharmaceutical quality
can be supplied to the pharmacies,” he says.
Carola Pérez is 40 and has a triangle of scars on her back as a
result of 13 operations. She has been living in pain since she was a
child and was, at one stage, addicted to morphine. Now she is the
president of the Spanish Medicinal Cannabis Observatory and director of
the Dosemociones Association for users of marijuana for therapeutic
purposes. She grows cannabis and manages to sleep thanks to the THC. She
is an icon for medicinal regulation in Spain and is often compared to
Pedro Zerolo who campaigned for same-sex marriages. Fighting alongside
her is Araceli Manjón-Cabeza, professor of criminal law and director of
21st Century Drugs at the Complutense University of Madrid.
“The pie will be divided between the big corporations,” says Pérez.
“And those that have been cultivating illegally, who have created new
varieties and who have been jailed on account of it will probably be
excluded. The pharmaceutical lobby has a lot of power. And the cannabis
lobby has been neither professional nor political. Right now we are
focused on Responsible Regulation. And the next government will have to
listen. This is not frivolous. It’s not about getting stoned. It’s a
question of survival.
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