Amsterdam's loss to be a gain for cannabis tourism in Toronto?

Warning message

The subscription service is currently unavailable. Please try again later.
Twitter icon

The doors of Amsterdam’s cannabis coffee shops have long been open to Canadians and other tourists.

But that may change.

Femke Halsema, mayor of the Netherlands’ capital, wants to restrict tourist access to its 166 cannabis-selling coffee shops, according toBloomberg News.

Under Halsema’s proposal — supported by police and prosecutors — only Dutch residents would be allowed to enter the shops in an attempt to tackle problems associated with hard drugs,  organized crime linked to the marijuana trade, and the city being overrun by tourists on the weekends.

The bad news is the restrictions show demand from cannabis from Dutch residents would only support 68 coffee shops, according to a government study.

“I want to shrink the cannabis market and make it manageable,” Halsema said in emailed comments to Bloomberg News.

“The residence condition is far-reaching, but I see no alternative.”

Ed Kim, who’s been operating torontotoketours.com since October 2018 when recreational weed became legal in Canada, said Halsema’s plan would definitely affect Amsterdam’s tourism negatively.

He said it remains to be seen if it would redirect cannabis-seeking tourists to Toronto where  cannabis stores are allowed.

“I don’t know if it’ll help the Toronto side because we don’t have any weed cafes open because right now the legislation is you can’t consume onsite,” said Kim.

“I know LPs (licensed producers) are pushing for that change, but right now there’s not cannabis cafes, per se. Down the line, yes. It was all supposed to happen this year and then COVID just kind of blew that all up. Will it increase the tourism rate? I would think so.”

Back in February 2020, BNN-Bloomberg reported the Ontario government was soliciting input about potentially permitting cannabis consumption in lounges — likely cannabis-infused drinks and edibles only. There was no timeline provided on a decision.

Halsema, who submitted the plan to the Amsterdam council recently, expects the policy to go into force in 2022 at the earliest. Before COVID, the city attracted more than 1 million visitors monthly — more than its permanent population.

The Guardian reported Amsterdam city councillors recently approved Halsema’s plan to shut its famous red-light district and move sex workers out of the city.

The plan is still seeking residents to weigh in on the move.

Whatever happens, Kim said tourists are already flocking to Toronto which got 28 million visitors in 2019, according to Tourism Toronto.

When the pandemic ends,  Kim’s torontotoketours.com will join a local retailer, stickynuggzinc,  and an unnamed licensed producer, to provide cannabis tours to tourists.

“So we’ll pick people up at the retailer and then drive to them LP,” said Kim. “And tour the facility — the beverages, the edibles, and the main production growth — that’s something pretty cool that a lot of people want to see.”

e-mail icon Facebook icon Twitter icon LinkedIn icon Reddit icon
Rate this article: 
Regional Marijuana News: