Australian Capital’s Cannabis Laws Present Confusion and Controversy

Experts say that the lack of clarity and provisions will allow the illicit market to continue to thrive.

By
A.J. Herrington

Possession and home cultivation of cannabis become legal in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT) at the end of the month, but a lack of provisions to establish an approved marijuana supply chain likely means the area’s illicit market will continue unabated. The ACT, home to Canberra, Australia’s national capital, passed measures in June that make it the first of the country’s jurisdictions to legalize cannabis for personal use.

Under the laws that go into effect on January 31, adults in the ACT will be permitted to possess up to 50 grams of dried cannabis or 150 grams of fresh marijuana. Using cannabis will be permitted in private homes but not in public or in the presence of children.

Home cultivation of up to two cannabis plants per adult or four per household will also be legalized, although hydroponic gardening will not be allowed. Plants that are in public view or accessible to children are also not permitted.

But no allowances for the sale or commercial cultivation of cannabis were written into the laws. No dispensaries will be opening and gifts of cannabis from one adult to another remain against the law. Even the sale of cannabis seeds will still be illegal. The ACT government has said that the laws are focused on “harm minimization” and are not intended to legitimize the distribution of cannabis.

“This approach seeks to ensure that adults who are in possession of cannabis do not have to face the prospect of criminal penalty for possession and are more easily able to seek help for addiction or treatment for the adverse effects of cannabis,” a government spokesperson said. “It is not the Government’s intention to legalize the gifting of cannabis between individuals, other acts of supply, or the commercial sale of cannabis.”

Professor Simon Lenton of the National Drug Research Institute at Curtin University in Perth said the new laws will leave most cannabis users with no choice other than continuing to buy their marijuana through the illicit market.

“Either they’re going to go to the illegal market or they’re going to miss out,” he said. “It really is a problem for how the majority of people in the ACT who smoke cannabis are going to access the cannabis.”

Lenton added that the legalization of cannabis clubs, which were considered by lawmakers while legalization was being drafted but failed to gain approval, would help alleviate the problem of legal supply. Under the social club model, up to 10 adults could pool their resources and legal plant counts to produce cannabis collectively at a single property. Only registered members of the club would be permitted access to the cannabis produced by the collective.

“It’s a way of providing cannabis in a restricted market without the problems of widespread availability, rampant commercialisation and profit-driven advertising to people who are regular cannabis users,” he said. “Rather than having them go to the illicit market.”

A.J. Herrington

A.J. Herrington is a San Diego-based freelance writer covering cannabis news, business, and culture.

View Comments

  • Simon Lenton, I seriously hope you meant that cannabis clubs as additional to being allowed to grow your own at home. Reading the last paragraph though, it seems he means in place of being permitted to grow one's own at home. What an idiot! Why give this schmuck any media exposure?

By
A.J. Herrington
Tags: Australia

Recent Posts

Some NY Lawmakers Say Illicit Pot Shops Must Close Before Adding Licensed Shops

New York’s legal cannabis market rollout has been trying, with long delays helping the illicit…

12 hours ago

Minnesota Senate Approves Bill To Accelerate Licensing of Weed Businesses

The Minnesota Senate has approved a bill to accelerate the licensing of recreational marijuana cultivators.

12 hours ago

Ho-Chunk Nation Decriminalizes Cannabis

Ho-Chunk police will not issue citations for pot possession.

12 hours ago

Medical Cannabis Program on the Decline in New Jersey

Patient numbers are at an all-time low, and patients are facing a myriad of roadblocks,…

12 hours ago

Orangutan Observed Using Medicinal Herb To Heal Wound

The new discovery involving an Indonesian orangutan challenges what we know about apes and wild…

12 hours ago

Study Finds Medical Cannabis Provides Lasting Benefits for Osteoarthritis Patients

Patients with osteoarthritis reported a reduction in pain associated with the disease when using medical…

2 days ago