The best-selling beverage at Fair State Brewing Cooperative these days is not a beer at all but a THC-infused seltzer, Chill State.
Since drinks and edibles with low doses of hemp-derived THC, the psychoactive component in cannabis, became explicitly legal in Minnesota last summer, dozens of brands have bubbled up across the state. Breweries especially jumped at the chance to offer a novel, non-alcoholic option — and shore up sales as craft beer's growth plateaus.
But Minnesota breweries and other hemp businesses are sounding the alarm over parts of a proposed bill to legalize recreational marijuana in Minnesota. If passed as introduced, the state's unique THC beverage market could evaporate.
"This has been a lifeline for many breweries," Fair State CEO Evan Sallee said. "I would not be surprised if some go out of business if this [bill] goes forward."
While THC beverages would remain legal and subject to new licensing and regulatory scrutiny, the way in which most are produced and sold would drastically change.
"There are so many hurdles buried in the bill that it would essentially destroy the market for us," said Bauhaus Brew Labs president and co-founder Matt Schwandt, whose Tetra THC beverage accounts for 5% of Bauhaus' sales.
One concern is a requirement in the bill that "cannabis manufacturing must take place on equipment that is used exclusively for the manufacture of cannabinoid products."
Critics say that would preclude all but the state's largest breweries or cideries from making their own beverages, assuming those bigger businesses would even want to invest in a second line of equipment.