Nova Scotia Liquor And Cannabis Sales Soar During Pandemic
According to NSLC’s third-quarter results, alcohol sales are up 11.7 percent compared to the same timeframe in 2019.
According to NSLC’s third-quarter results, alcohol sales are up 11.7 percent compared to the same timeframe in 2019.
Golden Peak Cannabis has produced two crops that have been purchased by Shediac-based licensed producer Crystal Cure for its Farmers series, a line that highlights small cultivators.
The stock for the Moncton-based producer closed on Thursday at $4.51 per share with a market cap of more than $1-billion.
From a facility that produces dried cannabis flowers, and makes cannabinoid-infused bath bombs in St. Stephen, Stewart Farms is also farming fish, linking both the cannabis and fish farms through aquaponics.
James Crosby says plans for EYG Consumables were shelved because of uncertainties in the cannabis industry, so they’re focusing solely on their core business that is doing very well, Crosby’s Molasses.
Shediac-based Crystal Cure’s products are now available at Cannabis NB. The products are currently available in Shediac, Moncton, Dieppe and Saint John.
The $40-million facility, which opened in 2019, employed 63 people.
The group of consumers suing the Moncton-based cannabis producer over pesticides found in its products will not be allowed to include personal injury claims as part of its case.
The Nova Scotia Liquor Corporation had another “very strong quarter” from June to September, bringing in $216 million, which is 6.3 percent more than the same period last year.
Sales at the Nova Scotia Liquor Corporation spiked substantially during the height of the Covid-19 pandemic.