Scientists search for marijuana’s holy grail — consistent highs

Breaking News Emails

Get breaking news alerts and special reports. The news and stories that matter, delivered weekday mornings.

Dec. 11, 2018 / 9:59 AM GMT

By Dennis Romero

WEST HOLLYWOOD, Calif. — Holiday shopping was in full swing Friday at a boutique on Santa Monica Boulevard, where an automatic sliding door welcomed browsers off the street.

Inside the well-lit shop decorated with Christmas wreaths, glass cabinets filled with elixirs, herbal pills and pen-size vaporizers beckoned. The dark wood floors and brand-name displays could have come out of a Sephora cosmetics store. Shoppers have to look past gleaming jars and fancy boxes to find what brought them here — old school marijuana “flower,” the part of the plant that people smoke to get high.

The hot products at Alternative Herbal Health Services are tinctures, pills and liquids that contain cannabinoids, such as THC and CBD, that are extracted from cannabis plants. The results include products with a consistent, reliable experience.

Simply smoking the cannabis flower doesn’t provide that level of dependability time and again, but marijuana retailers and their customers would like it to. Yet that product — considered by some to be legal pot’s holy grail — still largely eludes the multi-million dollar industry at a time when it’s experiencing historic expansion.

“That’s been the goal forever,” said Greg Zuckert, vice president of cultivation for cannabis producer Harvest Health & Recreation.

A number of companies, some publicly traded, are chasing the goal of growing a predictable plant by hiring decorated scientists, setting up labs and building research greenhouses previously used mainly by so-called Big Agriculture. They’re hoping a product people can rely on will translate to millions of dollars in sales.

The latest market forecast from by Arcview Market Research in partnership with BDS Analytics concludes that U.S. “retail flower sales are forecast to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 14.8 percent to reach $8.5 billion in 2022.”

Still, according to that forecast, a growing portion of pot store customers are opting for processed cannabis concentrates that give them a more consistent impact.

“Folks are using it in new forms, low-dose, edibles, tinctures, capsules, and what they care about is the effect,” said Jon Vaught, CEO of agricultural technology firm Front Range Biosciences. “But there are consumers who want to consume cannabis the way they have for years. They like the things they know.”

Front Range and a handful of other companies are hoping to patent unique marijuana plants — some cannabis patents have already been granted — that could produce consistent crops with repeatable effects for users.

A humidity indicator rests in a bowl of a strain of cannabis called “Walker Kush” at New England Treatment Access medical cannabis dispensary, in Northampton, Massachusetts, on Oct. 17. The Walker Kush strain of cannabis is intended for legal recreational consumption once cannabis products can be sold legally in the state.Steven Senne / AP

In November, Michigan became the 10th state to legalize recreational marijuana. Thirty-three states and the District of Columbia have approved some form of legalization, broadening the market for what has been until now a product mastered outside the lab.

Mowgli Holmes, chief scientific officer of Phylos Bioscience in Portland, Oregon, is heading a team that’s hoping to sequence the DNA of all known cannabis strains.

“We’re using genetic information to help people do plant breeding and develop new varieties,” he said.

The goal is not only to reproduce a high, but to be able to control that high, Holmes said.

“No one ever knows what they’re getting, and it’s a huge problem,” said the scientist, who has a doctorate in microbiology from Columbia University. “It’s making it so the industry doesn’t work very well. Often it’s way too strong. It’s Russian roulette. New customers get burned and don’t come back.”

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*