Cannabis firms catch a whiff of opportunity in Brazil
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[August 20, 2021] By
Ana Mano
SAO PAULO (Reuters) - International
cannabis companies are showing interest in Brazil, both its large
consumer market for medicinal products and a proposal that could
legalize planting of the crop.
Major producers like Colombia's Clever Leaves and Canada's Canopy Growth
are developing and selling medicinal cannabis products to a Brazilian
consumer segment estimated at 10 million to 13 million people. This
results from a 2019 regulatory change allowing the import, sale and
manufacturing of such products.
But permission for cultivation of hemp and cannabis in Brazil would be a
bigger prize. If granted, the industry could blossom in four to five
years, based on the experience of other countries such as Colombia.
"By 2025, I would like to be planting hemp in the interior of Pernambuco,"
said José Bacellar, founder of Canada's VerdeMed, referring to a
northeastern state known for illegal marijuana growing.
A proposal that would legalize cultivation was approved in June by a
congressional committee. Lawmakers are weighing if it could be
fast-tracked to the Senate for approval. If passed there, President Jair
Bolsonaro would have to sign it into law.
While Bolsonaro's far-right positions may seem an unlikely match for the
bill, the proposal has support from some members of the powerful farm
sector, a key constituency that helped him win the 2018 election.
SILICON VALLEY OF CANNABIS
In the quiet town of Viçosa in southeastern Brazil - which some call the
Silicon Valley of cannabis - researchers are developing a hemp variety
better suited to the tropics.
If the law is changed and research is successful, Brazil could become a
top grower of cannabis and hemp, experts said.
Sérgio Rocha, director of ag-tech startup Adwa which is developing the
hemp strain for Brazil, said about 3 million square kilometers (1.2
million square miles) of land would potentially be suitable for
cultivating the new variety.
Brazil could overtake China, the world's largest hemp producer, which
has about 670 square kilometers (259 square miles) planted.
"Using a part of Brazil's agricultural land would be enough to give the
country the title of world's largest producer and exporter of hemp
fibers, seeds and flowers for medicinal and industrial purposes," said
Dennys Zsolt, an agronomist specializing in the plant.
Brazil bans growing of Cannabis sativa L, the plant that produces hemp
and marijuana. Hemp, which has less than 0.3% of the psychoactive
compound THC, contains CBD or cannabidiol. This non-intoxicating
ingredient has been touted as beneficial for many health conditions
including childhood epilepsy.
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Agronomist Engineer Sergio Rocha, 36, Executive Director of the
cannabis cultivation for research and cultivation project, works
inside of a greenhouse at the Federal University of Vicosa, Minas
Gerais state, Brazil, August 18, 2021. Picture taken August 18,
2021. REUTERS/Washington Alves
Growing the plants in Brazil would lay the foundation for a vertically
integrated industry. A stable source of the raw material would support
manufacturing of medicinal cannabis products, growth of a retail market
and exports. Recreational cannabis would remain illegal.
Gabriela Cezar, chief executive of New York-based Panarea Partners
investment banking firm, sees Brazil playing a leading role in hemp in
Latin America, a region she calls the "epicenter of world hemp
production."
Panarea plans to form a Brazilian cannabis company focused on
pharmaceutical products for pets while seeking to broker more cannabis
deals in Brazil.
TROPICAL ADVANTAGE
Among Brazil's advantages are lower growing costs because its warm
climate allows plants to grow outdoors compared to greenhouses in some
countries. Stable hours of sunlight due to Brazil's proximity to the
equator are another plus.
Canopy Growth is "actively monitoring the advancement of hemp
regulations in Brazil," David Culver, the company's vice president of
global government relations, said.
But nothing is certain without the change to Brazil's law, though some
signs suggest the prospects are favorable. When Rocha spoke to a
congressional committee about hemp in 2019, he was surprised that
conservative lawmakers were not hostile.
"After I finished presenting the maps and hemp's potential, I was
applauded," he said.
Although the farm caucus has not taken a formal position, members of the
group said a majority in both houses of Congress back the proposal. The
farm caucus controls slightly fewer than half the seats in the two
chambers, and the law requires approval by a simple majority.
Center-right lawmaker Fausto Pinato, a member of the farm caucus, said
he supports the bill. "If you are authorizing the sale, why not
cultivation?," he said.
(Reporting by Ana Mano in São Paulo, Jimin Kang in Seul and Maximilian
Heath in Buenos Aires; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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