• Skip to main content
  • Skip to after header navigation
  • Skip to site footer
420cannadispensary.com

420cannadispensary.com

cannabis reviews and news

General

  • Home
  • Blog
  • Contact
Buy Now

Categories

  • All Articles
  • Business
  • Local
  • Trending
  • Reviews
  • Contact

Newsletter

* We don’t do spam, just the latest news. Sign up today and get our top stories delivered straight to your inbox.

  • All Articles
  • Business
  • Local
  • Trending
  • Reviews
  • Contact
Local Reviews Trending

9 In 10 Illicit Marijuana Samples Contained Pesticides In ‘Striking Contrast’ To Regulated Products, Study Finds

August 31, 2023 by Kyle Jaeger

A new study reveals the “striking contrast” in safety between marijuana grown for the legal versus illegal markets in Canada, with 92 percent of unregulated cannabis testing positive for numerous pesticides compared to just six percent of regulated products.

The study, published in the Journal of Cannabis Research last week, involved testing 36 marijuana samples from licensed retailers and 24 illicit samples that were seized by law enforcement. The analysis allowed researchers to see if the products were grown with or contaminated by any of 327 different pesticides.

For the legal cannabis, the contamination rate was just six percent, with trace amounts of “only two pesticide residues detected, myclobutanil and dichlobenil.” The latter pesticide is not among the 96 that are subject to mandatory testing under Canadian statute.

Pesticides in the illicit market samples, however, were ubiquitous. Ninety-two percent of the samples contained potentially dangerous chemicals, the study found, identifying “23 unique pesticide active ingredients with 3.7 different pesticides identified on average per sample.”

“Chlorpyrifos, imidacloprid, and myclobutanil were measured in illicit samples at concentrations up to three orders of magnitude above” the method’s lowest calibrated level of 0.01 μg/g, the study’s authors said. “One illicit sample alone contained nine different pesticide active ingredients.”

Notwithstanding the six percent of legal samples that contained low amounts of pesticides, researchers said “the licensed Canadian cannabis sector has greatly improved.” Prior to mandatory testing requirements in 2019, the contamination rate stood at around 30 percent.

“To the authors’ knowledge, this study is the only extensive pesticide multiresidue analysis that compares pesticides in the licenced and illicit cannabis markets in a nation-wide jurisdiction where cannabis has been legalised,” authors said. “Albeit being a small study, our results do support the Government of Canada messaging where ‘Consuming illegal products could lead to adverse effects and other serious harms. Testing of illegal cannabis has found contaminants like pesticides and unacceptable levels of bacteria, lead and arsenic.’”

In other words, the findings affirm what cannabis reform advocates have long been saying: Regulating marijuana sales gives consumers access to safer products.

A separate study published last year examined marijuana testing rules in U.S. state markets and found that the patchwork of laws has caused public confusion and underscores the “urgent” need for “unified regulatory approach” and “national-level guideline on the contaminant regulations of cannabis.”

Developing such a national framework is challenging under federal prohibition, however. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has approved the use of certain pesticides for hemp after the crop was federally legalized under the 2018 Farm Bill, but it’s declined to do the same for marijuana while it remains illegal.

Meanwhile, a pair of Republican congressional lawmakers has reintroduced legislation this session aimed at combatting the use of banned pesticides at illegal marijuana grows. The bill’s co-sponsor said in March that one effect of the bill would be to protect the health of consumers—especially medical cannabis patients.

In 2019, the nonprofit organization Beyond Pesticides urged supporters to contact their congressional representatives with a letter calling for federal regulations on pesticides used in marijuana in order to promote public health and safety.

That year, a rash of vaping-related lung injuries and deaths erupted following the addition of hazardous additives in vape cartridges. A study later found that injuries were lower in states with legal marijuana sales and homegrow.

Also in 2019, the federal National Science Foundation awarded a $250,000 grant to a biotech startup that was developing technology to remove dangerous pesticides from a variety of crops, including marijuana.

GOP Congressman Explains Why He’ll Vote For Ohio Marijuana Legalization Initiative In November As State Releases Pro And Con Arguments

Photo courtesy of Brian Shamblen.

The post 9 In 10 Illicit Marijuana Samples Contained Pesticides In ‘Striking Contrast’ To Regulated Products, Study Finds appeared first on Marijuana Moment.

This post was originally published on this site

You May Also Like…

Hash Review: OGZ by Handmade Hash x Mendoja Farms

Hash Review: Hunny Bunny Rosin by Laughing Shaman

Arizona Psilocybin Council To Hold First Meeting This Week As Officials Prepare To Distribute $5 Million In Research Grants

New York Marijuana Regulators Approve Settlement Agreements To End Months-Long Business Licensing Blockade

About Kyle Jaeger

Previous Post:Missouri Judge Denies Effort To Stop Recall of 62,000 Marijuana Products
Next Post:South Dakota Attorney General Releases Final Summary For 2024 Marijuana Legalization Ballot Initiative, But Advocates Weigh Litigation Over ‘Unfair’ Language

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

420 Cannadispensary

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
  • TikTok

Categories

Local
News
Trending
Tech
Business
Legal

Newsletter

No spam, ever.

Copyright © 2023 · 420cannadispensary.com · All Rights Reserved · Powered by 420CannaDispensary.com