Delta 9 to expand cannabis production, open more stores to meet growing demand - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 07:35 AM | Calgary | -12.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Delta 9 to expand cannabis production, open more stores to meet growing demand

Winnipeg cannabis producer and resaler Delta 9 plans to expand its production capacity and open more stores to keep up with a growing demand that has exceeded expectations of many in the industry.

Winnipeg-based grower-distributor-seller hopes to up annual growth to 60,000 kg by 2022

Delta 9 Cannabis currently has 200 plants growing in each of its 154 pods. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

Winnipeg cannabis producerand resaler Delta 9 plans to expand its production capacity and open more stores to keep up with a growing demand.

"All of our expectations have been blown away, the demand is far in excess of our projections," said CEO JohnArbuthnot.

The company announced Friday itaimsto grow60,000 kilograms annually by 2022, compared to its current annual projected growth of 4,224.

Delta 9 also plans toopen an additional three stores in Winnipeg, Brandon and Thompson, bringing its total store number from one to four.The company is also working with aFirst Nation to open another.

Arbuthnotsaid the market has been under pressure since Delta 9 opened its first store on legalization day last October.

Delta 9 CEO John Arbuthnot said the company plans to expand its production capacity to become one of the largest cannabis growing, processing and distribution centres in Canada. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

"We've seen an incredible reception from the consumer side, we've seen some concerns industry-wide from a supply side," he said.

"I think what all of this means is it's an incredible opportunity for business to be ramping up on the production, the distribution side. There's an incredible opportunityto expand out into retail as well.I think we couldn't be happier with how things have gone in the wake of legalization."

The company plans to expand in two phases over the next three to four years.

A big part of that first step comes in the form of adding more repurposed steel shipping containers, or growing pods, to its facility.

Delta 9 is expanding the number of production pods in its Winnipeg centre. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

Right now the company has about 154 pods growing about 200leafy green plants in each, but it hopes to boost that by adding another 456 pods this year.

That's expected to take its current 49,000-square-feet of production space to just under 200,000-square-feet, the company said. Production is estimated to increase by nearly 16,800 kilograms.

The first phase is projected to cost $24 million which Delta 9 plans to bankroll through its current revenue stream.

Boxes of sensi star cannabis product fill shelves in the facility Friday. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

The next phase will take place between 2020 and 2022 and cost another $115 million.

During that period the company wants to beef up its growing pod network to about 2,000; 15 modular warehouse buildings totalling480,000 square feet of production space will be rolled out; and a 30,000 square foot cannabis extraction facility will be built, the company says.

The company hopes to up its production capacity to 60,000 kilograms annually by 2022. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

Arbuthnot hopes it will all help the company get toits 60,000-kg annual target by 2022.

Right now Delta 9 employs 200 staff but plans to bump that up to around 750 by the time the expansion projects are completed, he said.

"It means investment, it means jobs, it means economic development and diversification for the province. All these are great things."

Delta 9 workers process cannabis plants Friday. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)