British Columbia’s monthly share of the federal excise duty on adult-use cannabis hit a fresh high, as the province continued to execute its plan to greatly expand the number of private- and publicly-owned marijuana stores.
For December, British Columbia’s share of the federal excise tax was 2.5 million Canadian dollars ($1.8 million) – the province’s highest monthly total since cannabis was legalized in late 2018.
The sum represents a 44% increase from the previous month’s CA$1.7 million.
The province’s share of the federal duty was CA$10 million for all of 2019, according to updated data released in May.
December’s record tax revenue is largely attributable to new store openings.
New stores represent the biggest opportunity for one-time excise gains as retailers stock their shelves for the first time, forcing the provincial wholesaler to replenish its inventory.
The excise tax is payable by licensed cannabis producers when product is delivered to a purchaser – in this case, the Liquor Distribution Branch (LDB).
Some 80 cannabis stores opened their doors between October and December of last year.
The province’s share is set to rise further in the coming months. Over 100 stores opened between January and May of this year.
Shipments of “Cannabis 2.0” products such as edibles and vape pens should also give a boost to excise duty payments.
B.C. is among a number of provinces with no formal deal in place with municipalities to share monthly proceeds from the federal excise tax.
Entrepreneurs say that has hurt business prospects, as municipal resistance has been a hurdle in some cases.
A tax-sharing regime would provide incentive for municipalities to be more welcoming to regulated cannabis businesses, according to some experts.
The Union of B.C. Municipalities (UBCM) has called on the province to formalize such an arrangement.
“Results from UBCM’s survey clearly demonstrate that local governments are incurring substantial incremental costs associated with legalization,” the group said last year.