Cannabis Safety And Quality Marches On Despite Absence Of Regulations

Cannabis Safety And Quality Marches On despite Absence Of Regulations

Over the past several years, the CBD industry has experienced meteoric growth and continues to demonstrate an upward trajectory. According to a recent market study published by Growth Market Reports (GMR), titled, “Cannabidiol (CBD) Market – Global Industry Analysis, Size, Share, Growth, Trends and Forecast,” the market was valued at USD 395.2 Million in 2019 and is expected to grow at a healthy growth rate of around 30.4% by the year 2027. They attribute the rise in the use of CBD to cannabis legalization across the globe. Furthermore, the passing of the 2018 Farm Bill sanctioned the farming of hemp – cannabis with less than 0.3% THC by weight. This, in turn, has enabled many farmers to adopt hemp farming, and the domestic supply of the plant has increased dramatically.

Meanwhile, the CBD industry has also been riddled with controversy. From media and consumer exposés over high levels of heavy metals, questionable levels of potency, and allegations of testing positive for THC after consuming CBD, the industry is far from having a squeaky-clean reputation. In the continued absence of federal guidance, regulation, and enforcement of CBD foods and supplements, COVID-19 could serve as the catalyst to provide questionable CBD industry performers their day of reckoning.

However, there is an emerging standard that embraces the foundation of global food safety best practices that is poised to challenge the current CBD compliance status quo, open retail doors, and help provide cannabis product confidence and trust – the Cannabis Safety and Quality Standards.

Requirements of the Standard

The Cannabis Safety & Quality (CSQ) Standards were launched in 2020 to promote industry best practices and improve the overall safety and quality of cannabis and cannabis-infused products in the market. The Cannabis Safety and Quality Certification Program is a first of its kind and based off of ISO 17067- Conformity assessment and Global Food Safety Initiative (GFSI) benchmarking standards. Why does this matter? The world’s leading retailers are galvanized behind GFSI. The GFSI benchmarking requirements are the world’s most widely accepted benchmark for food safety certification programs. Aligned with Codex Alimentarius, these science-based requirements enable a common understanding and mutual trust in the global supply chain that helps facilitate trade, improves efficiency, and lends nameplate authority to operations certified to a GFSI-recognized program.

What’s Different about CSQ?

Cannabis Safety & Quality provides a firm set of “regulations” in a time when this industry has little to no regulatory oversight. It creates a semi-self-regulating environment where private auditing firms close the regulatory oversight gaps. Given that it is going through the GFSI benchmarking process and based on FDA cGMP requirements, it fulfills domestic production safety and quality requirements in addition to opening up global trade barriers. Unlike cGMP audits, Cannabis Safety & Quality is an accredited certification program and has stricter requirements for auditor competency. It has a heavy focus on documentation, so even though the audit is simply a snapshot in time, the compliance documentation has to have been maintained over an extended period.

Certification Bodies Involved

The official launch date of the Cannabis Safety and Quality Standards is January 4, 2021. At this time, only two global certification bodies have been approved to offer services: QIMA-WQS, a global third-party food safety certification company and ASI Food Safety.

What’s Next for CSQ?

The current Cannabis Safety & Quality audit is focused on production and grow facilities, but the efforts aren’t stopping there. Newly accredited cannabis standards include infused cosmetics, cannabis packaging, retail, and foodservice. For those brands still in need of a stepping stone, a more traditional baseline cGMP and cGAP audit are available.

Free training and guidance documents can also be found online to assist the industry in developing and implementing Cannabis Safety and Quality compliant systems.

Given the patchwork quilt that is current state-by-state cannabis regulations, Cannabis Safety and Quality is assembling a new “Gold Standard” of cannabis regulations. The effort takes best practices from current regulations and aims to help streamline and standardize regulations for new states or countries considering the legalization of cannabis.

For those progressive brands with state-of-the-art quality and safety best practices, check out the new standards published by Cannabis Safety and Quality.

About the Author:

Jaclyn Bowen MPH, MS is a food and consumer products quality and safety systems engineer and executive director of Clean Label Project, a national non-profit and standards development organization with the mission to bring truth and transparency to food and consumer product labeling.  Her expertise is in organic, gluten-free, non-gmo labeling, food safety, and label claim substantiation and compliance.  Bowen conducted one of the most comprehensive studies of the top-selling CBD products in America- testing 208 products for potency, pesticides, heavy metals, plasticizers, and residual solvents. She provided public testimony as to the marketing and contents of CBD products at an FDA public hearing in May 2019 and was invited to present the findings at the United Nations Commission on Narcotics in Vienna Austria in March 2020.  Bowen and Clean Label Project have appeared on NBC, ABC, CNN, ‘The Doctors’, ‘Dr. Oz’, ‘Dr. Drew’ and 450+ print and online media outlets including USA Today and Huff Post.  

Even A Bare Minimum Certification Can Improve Cannabis Business Operations

Even A Bare Minimum Certification Can Improve Cannabis Business Operations

Cannabis Safety & Quality worked with cultivators, extractors and manufacturers to create stringent standards for cannabis facility certifications. In an initial pilot program in late 2020, 10 facilities were audited; only two passed.

Originally Posted: CEN Cannabis Equipment News

This week, Tyler Williams, founder and chief technology officer of Cannabis Safety & Quality, discusses his work with cultivators, extractors and manufacturers to create stringent standards for cannabis facility certifications.

CSQ launched four new standards in 2020, and the company licenses the use of those standards to accredited certification bodies. Although its long-term goal is standards from seed to sale, CSQ currently offers: 

  • Growing and Cultivation of Cannabis Plants
  • Manufacturing and Extraction of Cannabis Plants
  • Manufacturing and Infusion of Cannabis into Food & Beverage Products 
  • Manufacturing of Cannabis Dietary Supplements

Certification can benefit companies from an operational standpoint, but the primary goal of CSQ is to eliminate recalls, improve product safety and quality, and improve transparency throughout the supply chain. It also leads to improved product consistency, added brand protection and enhanced marketability — compliant companies are placed in a public database which can increase consumer and retailer confidence. 

According to Williams, a bare minimum of certifications and standards can help businesses improve transparency and make them more insurable. 

Williams started his work in the industry about three years ago, initially as a low-level audit. The program was a hodgepodge of regulations pulled from the pharmaceutical, food and dietary supplement industries, and Williams worked with companies to fill in the gaps. Slowly, it built into multiple stringent audit standards. 

Williams has a background in food safety that he is bringing to cannabis. While working for ASI Food Safety, he was a part of more than 3,000 audits with major food and beverage companies. 

For the initial pilot program in late 2020, 10 facilities were audited. Only two, Curaleaf-Ravena and One Plant, made the cut. 

Williams also works with the National Cannabis Industry Association as part of the policy council to provide guidance on regulations. He says federal action on cannabis is “around the corner,” and companies are pushing toward certification now to get ahead of the regulations that will come with federal recognition. 

Right now, state-by-state regulations offer “bare minimum requirements” and many companies are already going beyond them to show that they have top-flight certification. 

Next, Williams is working on standards for cosmetics, packaging material, the food service industry, and the retail side of the business. But he stresses that the size of your business doesn’t matter: certification, at least at some level, is beneficial. Even if you don’t want to get certified, you can still follow the standards which are publicly available for best practices.

Why Obtain A CSQ Certification?

Why Obtain A CSQ Certification?

Cannabis Safety & Quality Certificates Awarded to Curaleaf and One Plant

The first Cannabis Safety and Quality (CSQ) Certificates were awarded to Curaleaf and One Plant.  

The CSQ Certification Program and applicable standards aim to serve as protection for these brands by minimizing the risk and ensuring regulatory requirements are met from seed-to-sale.

The standards were built in 2020 to meet ISO requirements and Global Food Safety Initiative (GFSI) requirements.

Curaleaf and One Plant received the certification because both placed transparency very high in their list of priorities. 

The companies were reviewed under the “Manufacturing and Infusion of Cannabis into Food & Beverage Products” standard.

This standard applies to the “addition of cannabis flower or cannabis derivatives into shelf-stable food and beverage products.”

It is one of four total standards set in CSQ meant to break new ground as part of the first cannabis certification program while meeting GFSI requirements.

The standards are set to be benchmarked in 2022.

Additional standards include the growing and cultivation, manufacturing and extraction, and manufacturing of dietary supplements.

“We are thrilled to have Curaleaf and One Plant as the first of many industry-leading brands putting compliance and quality first with CSQ’s stamp of approval,” said Tyler Williams, founder and CTO of CSQ. “Obtaining third-party certifications like ours helps lay the groundwork for a more self-regulated industry that continuously produces safe and reliable products for patients and consumers.”

Why Obtain a CSQ Certification?

  • CSQ is safety-driven.
  • CSQ aims to set “reliable cannabis industry standards to help companies minimize risk, protect their brand, and provide the best product for their consumers.” 
  • The CSQ Standards were created in 2020 to meet ISO requirements, GFSI requirements, and regulatory cannabis requirements from seed-to-sale.
  • Receiving a certificate lets other companies know how dedicated their potential partner may be.
    • One Plant is currently operating in a Nexus greenhouse and full lab.
    • One Plant has seven stores, but plan to expand to 12 in the near future.
    • One Plant “operates a robust, eCommerce driven, next-day statewide delivery model.” 
    • Curaleaf is vertically integrated.
    • Curaleaf’s high-growth cannabis operation is known for “quality, expertise, and reliability.”
    • Curaleaf’s brands, Curaleaf and Select, provide accessibility across both medical and recreational sales.
    • Curaleaf operates in 23 states, 95 dispensaries, and multiple cultivation and processing sites.  
  • The CSQ Certification is available in eight short steps.
  • The CSQ website has instructions on how to obtain a certificate.
 

Originally Posted: Cannabis & Tech Today

First Cannabis Safety & Quality Certificates Issued To Curaleaf And One Plant

First Cannabis Safety & Quality Certificates Issued To Curaleaf And One Plant

The global cannabis safety and quality auditing standard certification is now available to cultivators, manufacturers and extractors.

PRESS RELEASE–St. Louis, Mo. (Jan. 7, 2020)–Cannabis Safety & Quality (CSQ) has awarded the first CSQ Certifications to Curaleaf, a leading U.S. provider of consumer products in cannabis, and Florida-based retailer, One Plant. The CSQ Certification Program and applicable standards aim to serve as protection for these brands by minimizing the risk and ensuring regulatory requirements are met from seed-to-sale. The standards were built in 2020 to meet ISO requirements and Global Food Safety Initiative (GFSI) requirements.

“We are thrilled to have Curaleaf and One Plant as the first of many industry-leading brands putting compliance and quality first with CSQ’s stamp of approval,” said Tyler Williams, founder and chief technical officer of CSQ. “Obtaining third-party certifications like ours helps lay the groundwork for a more self-regulated industry that continuously produces safe and reliable products for patients and consumers.”

CSQ’s licensed third-party auditors, technical directors, and consultants have been training since the beginning of December 2020 to make these pilot audit certifications possible. Both companies were reviewed under the “Manufacturing and Infusion of Cannabis into Food & Beverage Products” standard, which applies to the addition of cannabis flower or cannabis derivatives into shelf-stable food and beverage products. This standard is one of four total standards within CSQ that are breaking new ground as part of the world’s first cannabis certification program meeting the GFSI requirements, set to be benchmarked in 2022. Additional standards include:

●       Growing and Cultivation of Cannabis Plants

●       Manufacturing and Extraction of Cannabis

●       Manufacturing of Cannabis Dietary Supplements

​Based in Florida, One Plant specializes in responsibly farmed cannabis. One Plant currently operates a state-of-the-art Nexus greenhouse, a full lab, and seven retail locations with five new locations coming soon. One Plant also operates a robust, ecommerce driven, next-day Statewide delivery model. Cultivators and manufacturers like One Plant that get certified are less likely to have a recall, endure a regulatory warning, or a voluntary withdrawal.

Curaleaf is a vertically integrated, high-growth cannabis operator known for quality, expertise, and reliability. Curaleaf and its brands, including Curaleaf and Select, provide industry-leading service, product selection, and accessibility across the medical and adult-use markets. Curaleaf currently operates in 23 states with 95 dispensaries, 22 cultivation sites, and over 30 processing sites.

A benefit for leading retailers like Curaleaf would also include peace of mind when working with suppliers who receive third-party audits. Eventually, dispensaries will have the capability to hand-pick new suppliers using CSQ’s searchable database to determine whether or not the supplier is compliant.

Cannabis Safety & Quality Certification Program Welcomes New Certification Body

Cannabis Safety & Quality Certification Program Welcomes New Certification Body

QIMA/WQS will audit cannabis companies across the supply chain as a CSQ-licensed certification body.

 
ST. LOUIS, Mo. — QIMA/WQS, a provider of independent third-party certification, inspection and training services, has become a licensed certification body for the Cannabis Safety & Quality (CSQ) Certification Program. The CSQ Certification Program and applicable standards aim to help cannabis companies minimize risk, protect their brand and meet regulatory requirements from seed to sale.
 
The CSQ Certification Program is breaking new ground as one of the world’s first cannabis certification programs that meets the Global Food Safety Initiative (GFSI) requirements, set to be benchmarked in 2022. The first CSQ Certifications will be awarded starting Jan. 4, 2021.
 
Headquartered in North Carolina, QIMA/WQS offers solutions to the food supply chain from farm to fork, and is a part of the QIMA Group, a supply chain compliance company that partners with brands, retailers and importers to optimize their global supply network. QIMA/WQS is approved by GFSI recognized schemes, government entities and major food retailers. 
 
“We are thrilled to welcome QIMA/WQS into our family of licensed certification bodies to foster the CSQ mission of improving the overall safety and quality of cannabis and cannabis-infused products worldwide,” said Tyler Williams, chief technical officer and founder of CSQ. “Our goal is to encourage the cannabis industry to self-regulate and think beyond meeting basic CGMPs. QIMA/WQS has been expanding internationally and conducting audits for nearly three decades, so we knew they would make great allies as we explore this uncharted territory.”  
 
As a certification body of CSQ, QIMA/WQS will carry out off-site document evaluations and on-site inspections to ensure each company is meeting proper cultivation, extraction or manufacturing safety standards. 
 
“At QIMA/WQS, we see an enormous potential to support and provide quality certification to the entire cannabis supply chain. Joining CSQ and its innovative approach is an exciting step into the diversification of our services and growth,” said Mario Berard, CEO of QIMA/WQS.