Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber

Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber

NZ Medical cannabis update: pesticide use during cannabis cultivation

The Misuse of Drugs Regulations 2019 set the minimum quality standard that medicinal cannabis products and ingredients must meet before they can be supplied in New Zealand. Importers, manufacturers and suppliers must apply for assessment and provide evidence to the Medicinal Cannabis Agency to verify that their products meet the minimum quality standard.

Under regulation 18, the following must not be treated with a pesticide unless the pesticide is a trade name product that is registered under the Agricultural Compounds and Veterinary Medicines Act 1997 (ACVM Act) for use on cannabis: any starting material intended for export, cannabis from which a cannabis-based ingredient is extracted, and an ingredient of a medicinal cannabis product.

The agency is aware that some growers wish to use pesticides on their crops and the Regulations currently do not allow this. While this issue is explored further, we propose an interim solution of allowing certain pesticide active ingredients to be used on medicinal cannabis crops. Licence holders must still comply with all other requirements of the Regulations, including Regulation 7, which specifies the pesticides that must be tested for and the limits that apply.

Users, importers, and manufacturers of pesticide products in New Zealand must also be aware of their obligations under other pieces of legislation.

More information on the list of pesticide active ingredients for which the Agency has no objection to the use of during the cultivation of cannabis can be found on the Ministry of Health website.

For more information:
Cannabis Law Report 
www.cannabislaw.report.

Publication date: