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Aphria Inc. APHA

Aphria, which is headquartered in Ontario, produces and sells medicinal and recreational cannabis. The company operates through retail and wholesale channels in Canada and internationally. Aphria is a main distributor of medical cannabis to Germany and has operations in over 10 countries outside of Canada. However, it does not have exposure to the U.S. CBD or THC markets due to the constraints of federal prohibition. It has some U.S. exposure through the acquisition of SweetWater, a craft brewer


NDAQ:APHA - Post by User

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Comment by jayjay2020on Jun 26, 2019 1:25pm
97 Views
Post# 29865739

RE:Hydro One adding more electrical capacity to Leamington area

RE:Hydro One adding more electrical capacity to Leamington area
jayjay2020 wrote:

Pot power: Hydro One adding new line to Leamington as greenhouse demand grows


Power distributor is expanding on an already $193-million upgrade in the region

Cannabis industry was among those advocating for increased electricity supplies

Region of southwestern Ontario is already home to a vast greenhouse industry

The “tomato capital of Canada” will soon be getting enough new electricity to power a city the size of Ottawa, Hydro One announced Thursday, with much of that juice going towards growing cannabis. Ontario’s largest electricity distributor said the new transmission line from Chatham to Leamington, near the province’s southwestern corner not far from Windsor, will be in addition to the nearly $200-million that has already been invested in the region to build three new transmission stations, one of which is already complete. The additional power will come online in stages, Hydro One spokesperson Jay Armitage explained, eventually adding 1,000 megawatts to the available supply in the region, roughly equivalent to Ottawa’s total demand.

The project “is directly related to the greenhouse growers, obviously a number of which are in the cannabis industry,” Ms. Armitage said. “My understanding is it is about 20 per cent cannabis and 80 per cent vegetables, we are seeing the demand from both but obviously the cannabis industry is having an impact.”

Greenhouse-grown vegetables have been a mainstay of the Leamington economy for decades – hence the “tomato capital of Canada” moniker on the town’s welcome sign – but cannabis has dominated new production in the region over the past few years.

Aphria Inc. is headquartered there and other major producers such as Tilray, Cronos and Canopy Rivers-backed PharmHouse have substantial operations there, in addition to dozens of smaller licensed cultivation facilities in the area.

Leamington also hosted the inaugural WE Cann industry conference in November, 2018, and multiple cannabis job fairs have already been held in the city of 28,000. As more greenhouses have plugged into the grid, Ms. Armitage said Hydro One started working with local industry representatives to assess their future needs.

“The industry has been clear, nobody is mincing their words. They are here, they are growing, they need our help and we are here to help and are working with them on this,” she said. “They have been advocating for this power and our role has been to listen and to help them advocate.”

The price “will be disclosed once it is established,” Ms. Armitage said, noting the project must first go through the development phase. That includes a preliminary engineering design, an environmental assessment and consultations with local communities and Indigenous groups to establish an exact route.

Ontario’s Independent Electricity System Operator (IESO) has requested the project be fully completed and operational by early 2026. “We will be doing everything we can to move as quickly as possible,” Ms. Armitage said, “because we recognize the need.”


On a side note APHA is already ahead of the game installing natural gas  lectrical generating power plants at both Aphria One and Double Diamond

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