Katelyn Baker
Well-Known Member
GREEN STATE
California was known as a major marijuana-producing state before it legalized recreational use. Just how big of a producer may surprise you.
LOCALLY GROWN
As of Nov. 9, adults in California were allowed to grow up to six marijuana plants per household as long as the area is locked and not visible from a public place. Rules may vary depending on municipal restrictions. Purchasing marijuana for recreational use will not be allowed until 2018.
Major growth
One indication of how much marijuana is grown in California is the number of plants seized by law enforcement on federal lands. Here are some of the largest areas where trespass cultivation occurred in 2013 in national forests.
Why on public lands?
A lot of outdoor cannabis cultivation in California occurs on public lands, where cultivators take advantage of remote areas to avoid risk of forfeiture of property.
Outdoor growing can yield more per plant and have less overhead than indoor growing.
California has 1.3 million acres of state park land and more than 8 million acres of national forest and wilderness.
Estimated market total
The United Nations World Drug Report estimates that law enforcement around the world seizes only 10 to 20 percent of drugs produced. If the marijuana plants seized in 2015 (2.64 million) are considered to be 20 percent of California's production, the state would have had 13.2 million plants. If each plant produced a conservatively estimated 1 pound with a market price of $1,765 per pound, the total value would equal about $23.3 billion.
WHAT'S HAPPENED IN OTHER STATES
Colorado voted in 2012 to legalize recreational use of marijuana, which led to legalization in 2014. The charts below show how prices for marijuana declined in the state, while the taxes raised from it increased. California is likely to have the same situation but on a much larger scale.
Prices down
After-tax prices for recreational cannabis in Washington state after legalization show the cost to consumers was nearly cut in half.
Tax revenue rises
Monthly revenue from retail sales tax, excise tax, and fees for licenses and applications in Colorado. Note: California has more than seven times the population of Colorado.
The map below uses data from the website PriceOfWeed.com, which tracks prices on the black market and at legal dispensaries. It shows that the states that legalized recreational marijuana have the lowest prices, whereas states such as North Dakota, where marijuana is strictly prohibited, have the highest.
News Moderator: Katelyn Baker 420 MAGAZINE ®
Full Article: California's Marijuana Production Is Already Mind Boggling
Author: Kurt Snibbe
Contact: The Orange County Register
Photo Credit: None Found
Website: The Orange County Register
California was known as a major marijuana-producing state before it legalized recreational use. Just how big of a producer may surprise you.
LOCALLY GROWN
As of Nov. 9, adults in California were allowed to grow up to six marijuana plants per household as long as the area is locked and not visible from a public place. Rules may vary depending on municipal restrictions. Purchasing marijuana for recreational use will not be allowed until 2018.
Major growth
One indication of how much marijuana is grown in California is the number of plants seized by law enforcement on federal lands. Here are some of the largest areas where trespass cultivation occurred in 2013 in national forests.
Why on public lands?
A lot of outdoor cannabis cultivation in California occurs on public lands, where cultivators take advantage of remote areas to avoid risk of forfeiture of property.
Outdoor growing can yield more per plant and have less overhead than indoor growing.
California has 1.3 million acres of state park land and more than 8 million acres of national forest and wilderness.
Estimated market total
The United Nations World Drug Report estimates that law enforcement around the world seizes only 10 to 20 percent of drugs produced. If the marijuana plants seized in 2015 (2.64 million) are considered to be 20 percent of California's production, the state would have had 13.2 million plants. If each plant produced a conservatively estimated 1 pound with a market price of $1,765 per pound, the total value would equal about $23.3 billion.
WHAT'S HAPPENED IN OTHER STATES
Colorado voted in 2012 to legalize recreational use of marijuana, which led to legalization in 2014. The charts below show how prices for marijuana declined in the state, while the taxes raised from it increased. California is likely to have the same situation but on a much larger scale.
Prices down
After-tax prices for recreational cannabis in Washington state after legalization show the cost to consumers was nearly cut in half.
Tax revenue rises
Monthly revenue from retail sales tax, excise tax, and fees for licenses and applications in Colorado. Note: California has more than seven times the population of Colorado.
The map below uses data from the website PriceOfWeed.com, which tracks prices on the black market and at legal dispensaries. It shows that the states that legalized recreational marijuana have the lowest prices, whereas states such as North Dakota, where marijuana is strictly prohibited, have the highest.
News Moderator: Katelyn Baker 420 MAGAZINE ®
Full Article: California's Marijuana Production Is Already Mind Boggling
Author: Kurt Snibbe
Contact: The Orange County Register
Photo Credit: None Found
Website: The Orange County Register