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						Fish help fuel bumper cannabis crops for Canadian 
						producer
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		 [February 04, 2019]   
		By Susan Taylor 
 TORONTO (Reuters) - The unlikely 
		combination of freshwater fish and cannabis is producing outsized 
		medical marijuana crops that Green Relief Inc aims to capitalize on, as 
		the Canadian company plots a stock market listing and global expansion.
 
 In an underground southern Ontario facility surrounded by farmland, 
		Green Relief operates a cutting-edge aquaponic farm, using filtered fish 
		waste to fertilize cannabis plants, which in turn clean the water for 
		the fish.
 
 The company says it is the world's only licensed producer to grow 
		medical marijuana this way, a pesticide-free process that took 2-1/2 
		years to fine tune. The only signs of this operation, which is built 
		into a hill and insulated by some three feet of dirt and grass, is 
		above-ground ventilation equipment sticking out of the ground.
 
 "This is the agriculture of the future," said Warren Bravo, a former 
		concrete contractor who co-founded the company with friend Steve LeBlanc 
		in 2013. "If you're not latching on to sustainable agriculture 
		technologies now, you're going to be a dinosaur."
 
		
		 
		
 Green Relief's closed-loop system, which raises 6,000 tilapia and 4,500 
		plants at any given time, uses 90 percent less water than conventional 
		agriculture, while delivering 10-20 percent better yields than 
		traditional methods, Bravo said.
 
 Every five weeks, Green Relief purges one of its 16 fish tanks, donating 
		some 300 market-size tilapia to Second Harvest, a food charity which 
		delivers the fish to a homeless shelter's kitchen.
 
 A C$60 million ($45.9 million) expansion is underway at the company's 
		rural base outside Hamilton, about an hour's drive west of Toronto, 
		which will add 15,000-20,000 kilograms to annual output. The project 
		also includes manufacturing and packaging operations, to process plants 
		from its satellite operations.
 
 That includes a recently acquired 100,000-square-foot indoor soccer 
		complex in Hamilton, which will produce some 15,000 kilograms of pot 
		after a C$9 million retrofit.
 
		
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			Baked tilapia fish, from an aquaponics grow operation by licensed 
			marijuana producer Green Relief, is served at Good Shepherd 
			Ministries homeless shelter's soup kitchen in Toronto, Ontario, 
			Canada January 27, 2019. Picture taken January 27, 2019. 
			REUTERS/Carlos Osorio 
            
			 
With partners, Green Relief is also building facilities in Thunder Bay, Ontario 
and Halifax, Nova Scotia that will each produce some 20,000 kilograms annually, 
Bravo said.
 Backed to date with some C$18 million from private investors, Green Relief is 
preparing to list on the Canadian Securities Exchange, and possibly Nasdaq, to 
help fund its growth plans.
 
An initial public offering is likely "within months," depending on market 
conditions, and will build on a current financing that prices 100 million shares 
at C$3.50 each, Bravo said. Green Relief could break even within months and 
expects to be profitable this year, he added.
 Bravo had been chief executive until he handed the job on an interim basis in 
January to John Durfy, who has a background in markets and investment.
 
 As majority shareholder and director of business development, Bravo is busy 
securing properties in Italy and Australia while advancing such joint ventures 
as an alliance with Switzerland's Ai Fame and Ai Lab.
 
 "Canada's in a very fortunate position right now," he said, referencing the 
country's world-leading legalization of recreational cannabis in October 2018. 
"We get to take the lead in a brand new industry."
 
 ($1 = 1.3072 Canadian dollars)
 
 (Reporting by Susan Taylor; Editing by Richard Chang)
 
				 
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