The Czech Government is pressing ahead with plans to launch Europe’s first fully legal commercial cannabis market, similar to those seen in Canada and many parts of the US.
Czechia already has some of the most lenient cannabis laws in Europe. The use, possession and cultivation (for personal use) of cannabis were decriminalised in 2010 while sale and importation are still strictly forbidden and can result in a prison sentence.
Czechia was also one of the first countries in Europe to permit a legal medicinal cannabis market, patients began to be issued their prescriptions in 2013.
The plan aims to move cannabis entirely away from the legacy market and effectively take control out of the hands of criminals as part of the country’s proposed ‘Cannabis Management Act’.
The Czech Government announced it would begin plans to legalise cannabis in line with Germany in late 2022. Since then, drug expert Jindřich Vobořil has been tasked with drafting a bill that would bring about a new law.
However, earlier in 2024 it was reported that plans had been scaled down. According to Business of Cannabis, two bills were written, with the weaker plan designed to put pressure on opponents and judge public support for a more ambitious commercial market, including dispensaries, which will tackle the illicit market.
“The cannabis black market is growing across Europe. In the Czech Republic, we seem to have reached its ceiling, and I don’t see many other options to prevent its functioning other than to take its demand and put it in the hands of legal sellers,” Vobořil said in early 2023.
The writers of the new draft of the cannabis bill are keen to ensure criminals can’t occupy the space between those consumers who wish to cultivate cannabis at home for personal use and those who simply want to purchase their cannabis products safely and legally.
They plan on doing this by involving companies such as multi-national American cannabis company Curaleaf and the huge Canadian business Tillray who are already operating in Czechia’s medicinal market.
To further ensure cannabis stays out of the legacy market the new draft bill of the ‘Cannabis Management Act’ contains a suggestion to operate a ‘seed to sale’ tracking system similar to one currently in use in Switzerland that will enable authorities to monitor the entire chain from manufacture through to sale to the end consumer.
The draft bill states that residents who wish to either cultivate or purchase cannabis will have to apply to the authorities for a license for each specific category, they will only be allowed to hold one license at a time. Those applying must be over the age of 18, be willing to pay a joining fee which is intended to go to the state budget, and agree to the limit imposed on amounts they can buy and the level of THC in the products.
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