Less packaging, more recycling, means greener weed for New Brunswick

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When cannabis was first legalized in Canada, customers immediately criticized the excessive plastic packaging that came with it. 

Some products generated as much as 70 grams of plastic and cardboard for one gram of marijuana. 

But that is starting to change. 

Some products, offered in pill containers, have shed the outer cardboard boxes and shrink-wrapped plastic seal. 

Others, such as a gram of cannabis from Ontario producer Aphria, come in sealed brown envelopes. 

"We are certainly mindful of the concerns raised around the amount of packaging used industry-wide, which was largely the result of ensuring compliance with the regulations under the Cannabis Act," said Andrew Swartz, a spokesperson for Aphria. 

"We are actively exploring new opportunities to streamline packaging within the existing regulations." 

The brown envelopes with fixed zip-locks meet Health Canada's requirements of being tamper-evident and child-resistant. 

Greener Weed 

Cannabis NB spokesperson Marie-Andrée Bolduc said the agency is also taking steps to recycle the plastic containers that are still in use.

Every retail outlet in the province now has recycling bins. 

"I think there was a willingness from the industry to respond to the need … to have recycle programs as much as possible," she said. "I know this same program is available in P.E.I., for example. So, I think this is a win-win for the producers as well as the customers." 

Cannabis NB says it's recycled a dozen crates of plastic since the program launched in March. 

Less packaging and more recycling is something Canopy Growth, a licensed producer based in Ontario, says it's aiming for as well. 

Canopy Growth, which operates its recreational cannabis division under the brand "Tweed," partners with TerraCycle, a recycling company that has brought the recycling box program to stores in seven provinces, including New Brunswick.  

"We are seven months old, so we are still very much in an infancy stage," said Courtney Langille, a spokesperson for Canopy Growth.

"It's important for us to work corroboratively about these challenges that we all share so that we can kind of stand on a united front." 

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