Pubdate: Sun, 18 May 2014 Source: New York Times Magazine (NY) Copyright: 2014 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/pages/magazine/index.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/297 Note: The New York Times Magazine is a section of the Sunday edition of the New York Times Author: Annie Lowrey NOW 20% MORE HEADY! It's the Economy There are many things that bother Jon Cooper about the market for marijuana. "It's nearly impossible to find a consistent product," said Cooper, one of the legion of tech start-up guys and M.B.A.s plunging into the world of pot. "You go into a dispensary and buy something called 'Sour Diesel' and try it. You go to another dispensary, buy 'Sour Diesel,' and it's a different experience. You go back to the first dispensary, buy it again and it's not the same, either." Despite the inconsistency, nobody doubts marijuana's popularity as a consumer product: 38 percent of Americans admit to having tried it, and 7 percent use it on a regular basis. But for decades, it has been produced and sold primarily on the black market, which has only recently developed shades of gray and white. This has wrenched the ancient psychotropic substance into the machinery of 21st-century consumer capitalism - with all the consultants, marketers, brand advisers and scientists that come with it. A joint might never be as easy to access as a can of beer or a cigarette. But thousands of people and millions of dollars are hard at work to make it as predictable and dependable as one. Call it the Bud Light-ification of bud. There's a pressing economic reason for the pot industry to get better if it is to survive, aside from its formidable legal challenges. The plant is relatively cheap and easy to grow, and not complicated to process either. Left to the whims of the open market - meaning ignoring taxes and regulations - the price of a joint could plummet to the price of a tea bag or a packet of sugar. So how will investors help the market mature while still making money? The market for marijuana is nothing like the market for corn or wine or tobacco - at least not yet - and the reasons start in the ground: Marijuana growing and processing is downright bush-league compared to modern American agribusiness. Much of the pot produced in the United States still comes from illegal or semi-legal grow sites, even given the surge of production and processing in states with recreational or medicinal laws. And strains remain understudied and underanalyzed, compared with the wheat in your cereal or even the marigolds in your garden. The inefficiencies continue to pile up after the harvest. Marijuana has to be cured, then trimmed, before it is sold, and much of this work is still done by hand. Workers use scissors to cut away tough outer leaves and expose the smokable part of the plant. It's a labor-intensive process, the kind that in other instances is completed by a machine, like a thresher or a cotton gin. Already, the booming industry has started ironing things out. Growers House, a Tucson-based "indoor gardening center," offers a wide variety of mechanical trimmers on its website. At the low end, for a few hundred dollars, they resemble salad spinners studded with blades; on the high end, they look more like propane grills. One of these, the Triminator ($17,900), can process 18 pounds of "material" in an hour - 90 times faster than hand-trimming, by the company's own estimate. Peter Adams, the executive director of Rockies Venture Club, an investment group that is researching the cannabis industry, thinks numbers like that mean an inevitable plunge in the price of pot. "People selling the ancillary products won't see that," Adams said. "You're still going to have the same cost for LED's, soil, heating, ventilation, air conditioning, those things." With costs and prices falling, producers might try to scramble up the value chain, complicating or sophisticating their offerings to get an edge. (Why sell nail polish when you can sell French manicures? More to the point, why sell cornmeal when you can sell Doritos?) There, they're going to have to do a better job of luring and keeping customers if they want to midwife pot into the great big American consumer market, where consistency is king. Crack open a can of Bud Light, then another and another. The beers should taste identical. Try the same with a McDonald's hamburger, a Marlboro red, a stick of Wrigley's gum or even a glass of name-brand, middle-market wine. Unless something has gone terribly wrong, it should feel as if you were sipping or smoking or eating the exact same product again and again and again. In spite of marijuana's significant popularity, there is still an element of roulette when it comes to smoking a legal joint or eating a legal brownie. Federal law does not require companies to test for and disclose levels of the drug's active ingredients, like tetrahydrocannabinol. (Federal law does not hold that pot is legal, after all.) Many dispensaries and producers fail to test for potency, contaminants or mold. And different states have different disclosure laws with different levels of efficacy. As such, a gram of "AK-47" bought in an Oakland dispensary might affect you differently than a gram of the same purchased in Colorado. (As Cooper pointed out: "What is AK-47 supposed to be, anyway?") Cooper's lament also applies to the realm of edibles, where marijuana oils and snacks can vary wildly in quality and potency. A recent study by The Denver Post, for instance, revealed large disparities between the amount of THC stated on an edible item's package and what the product actually contained. Usually, the problem was underdosing: One chocolate "Star Barz" had 0.37 milligrams of the drug's main psychoactive component, when it had been advertised as having 100 milligrams. "Under a commercial system, the rules could be a lot tighter," said Mark Kleiman of the University of California, Los Angeles, an adviser to Washington State."Right now, you have some products where you're supposed to eat, say, an eighth of a cookie. Who's going to take a circular cookie and geometrically divide that friable object into eighths?" Sensing the opportunity for something more predictable, Cooper and his partner at Ebbu, a Colorado pot start-up, are creating a variety of predosed products - like prerolled joints, or little Listerine-style strips. They have eschewed the silly strain names, instead labeling their products "high-energy," "relaxed," "bliss," "create" and "giggles." Lauren Ely, a librarian from Erie, Colo., is working on a start-up called DisposaBowls - prepacked, disposable ceramic pipes."I joke around and tell everyone I'm the old, fat Nancy Botwin," she said, referring to the character from the Showtime show "Weeds." She said that she hoped the product would appeal to experienced smokers looking for a convenient way to bring the product with them while they go on a hike, for example. But she also saw it as a good way to introduce novices, seniors and medicinal smokers to pot, with gentle, predictable results. The legal pressure on even legitimate marijuana businesses helps to explain much of the immaturity, by scaring away capital, both monetary and human: The industry until now has mostly been made up of potheads and lawbreakers, after all. But the investors I spoke with said that pitches have gotten better, and money has been rushing in, too. Despite the potential, many investors are still hesitating at spending the money that might make joints and brownies less ad hoc, more corporate. Why spend $20 million on a grow site that might be shut down, or a new brand that might get stamped out by the next administration's Justice Department? A surfeit of laws - and confusion between them - is holding the market back. "It's a little bit like Alice in Wonderland," said Adams, of Rockies Venture Club. "All the rules of physics are broken, and you're trying to figure your way through a strange place." To be fair, it will probably feel like that to new consumers too. Correction: May 13, 2014 An earlier version of this article misidentified the cable network that aired the show "Weeds." It is Showtime, not HBO. Annie Lowrey is an economics reporter for The Times. [sidebar] Deep Thoughts This Week 1. Marijuana growing is on the brink of modernization. 2. Pot products are cheap, but inconsistent. 3. So how do you make money from it? 4. Think like Frito-Lay. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D