Pubdate: Thu, 08 Nov 2012 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2012 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Tamsyn Burgmann Page: A5 THRIVING UNDERGROUND DRUG INDUSTRY AT RISK The future appears hazy for British Columbia's thriving underground pot industry, even as two U. S. states have voted to allow citizens to legally use the drug recreationally. Business consequences could range from mild to sending marijuana producers' livelihoods up in smoke, depending on how much of the estimated $ 6- billion to $ 8- billion annual economy is now being exported south of the border, analysts say. Opinion on the impact of the votes in Colorado and Washington state varies considerably, but those urging Canada to adopt a more evidence- based policy on marijuana say the latest development means Canada is falling behind the U. S. The value of the export pot market cannot be easily quantified because it's based on smuggling. But experts who believe it's hefty argue the market for well-known "B. C. bud" will shrink simply because it won't be in such high demand in places like neighbouring Washington state, where users will be able to make legal purchases. "It may not wipe out the entire market but probably ( will) wipe out most of it," said University of B. C. economics Prof. Werner Antweiler, who says a substantial amount of B. C.' s marijuana - in the range of two-thirds - is sold on the U. S. west coast. If that is the case, he said the impact would be felt most in the B. C. Interior, where a sizable quantity of the illegal crop is cultivated. "They will lose production. These communities will suffer certain amounts of setbacks in terms of the economic welfare, simply because this money that's being made is percolating in those communities," Antweiler said. "If you take $ 8 billion and even take 20 per cent off or 30 per cent off, it will have a somewhat noticeable impact." RCMP, however, say the "majority" of marijuana cultivated in both Canada and the U. S. is produced to support domestic demand, according to a 2004 border drug threat assessment. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt