Legal marijuana is becoming increasingly entrenched in the US each year, and this year looks to be no exception.
In fact, some observers say it could be a “tipping point” for an ever-growing industry already worth billions of dollars.
By the end of the year, nearly a dozen states will decide whether to legalize pot — with seven to determine whether they will allow recreational use.
Photo: AP
Already, 23 out of 50 states, plus the nation’s capital, allow pot in some form, whether for medical or recreational purposes.
At the beginning of this year, 86 percent of Americans lived in a state permitting cannabis use in some form.
As acceptance of the drug grows across the US, so too do sales, which are expected to hit nearly US$22 billion by 2020.
“It is going to be a very, very competitive market in the next five years,” said John Kagia, director of industry analytics at New Frontier, a firm specializing in the cannabis business.
While possession, sale and consumption of marijuana remains illegal at the federal level, it is permitted for recreational use in four US states: Alaska, Colorado, Oregon and Washington, plus the US capital, Washington.
According to Kagia, “2016 will be the tipping point” for pot, with 11 states slated to decide whether to allow it in one form or another.
The western states of Colorado and Washington pioneered recreational marijuana legalization in 2012, and sales have increased 30 percent per year on average since then in the US, according to New Frontier and the ArcView Group, another firm focused on analyzing the cannabis industry.
US pot sales climbed to US$4.6 billion in 2014 and are expected to reach US$21.8 billion in 2020, New Frontier says.
The explosion in sales is due mainly to the legalization of recreational pot in some states. Although medical marijuana represented 92 percent of all pot sales in 2014, its share of the total is expected to fall to 47 percent in just four years.
The market for pot is in full bloom thanks to burgeoning industrial growing operations, marijuana edibles and a higher demand for equipment from those who want to grow — or consume — cannabis at home.
And while entrepreneurs see dollar signs behind every joint rolled, so too do state governments that stand to reap massive gains in the form of taxes.
Last year, Colorado earned about US$135 million in taxes and licensing fees on nearly US$1 billion in pot sales, according to the Denver Post.
The state of Washington took in US$70 million on statewide pot revenue totaling US$257 million, a number that came in lower than expected after a pot shortage.
As the US falls for pot, competition has become increasingly fierce, and the variation in regulations and taxes from state to state has given rise to some tension.
The amount of pot a person can grow varies as well, with up to four plants allowed in Oregon and six plants in Colorado, but none in the state of Washington.
Six plants are allowed in the US capital, Washington, where marijuana advocates celebrated the city’s one-year anniversary on Friday last week for legalizing pot.
However, the US Congress, which has some authority in the capital’s local governance, has prevented the city from regulating its pot market, which means buying and selling marijuana is still illegal.
The next president, who will be elected in November, could tip the balance in either direction at the federal level, experts said at a recent marijuana tradeshow called CannaShow in Washington.
For those entering the marijuana industry, the market has sparked particular worries and uncertainties, such as the fact that all payments must be made in cash since banking services are not extended to the pot industry, the risk of Congressional intervention or even a price war.
Moreover, growing cannabis, or “cannaculture” as it is called, is a costly endeavor, with plants needing gallons of water and a constantly warm environment, and thus electricity.
According to New Frontier, cannabis is the greediest of crops in terms of electricity, accounting for 1 percent of all electricity used in the US (the same amount as 1.7 million homes) at an annual cost of US$6 billion.
Electricity accounts for up to 50 percent of the wholesale price of cannabis.
Despite these pitfalls, pot proponents are quick to point out that legalization of the substance has its societal virtues, such as putting an end to some discriminatory arrests.
In the US capital, for example, 91 percent of those arrested for marijuana-related offenses before legalization were black.
Legalizing marijuana also keeps down overcrowding of courts and prisons.
Retired Baltimore police commander Neill Franklin, who is part of the advocacy group Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, an organization of officers who speak out against current drug policy, said that between 500,000 and 600,000 people are arrested each year for cannabis in the US.
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