Categories: NewsTechnology

America’s Weed Market To Develop a Cloud-based Tracking System Based on a SICPA’s Model

As legal states for medical and recreational marijuana continue to expand across the United States, with more having just been added in time for the election, the regulatory regimes overseeing the production and sale of pot are getting more sophisticated and more thorough.

Humboldt County, for example, is a section of California that legalized weed with the rest of the state and is currently operating a pilot program to “track and trace” legal medical marijuana from grower to dispensary to patient. The program called the Humboldt Cannabis Pilot Program, uses the latest in information technology to track the marijuana across the supply chain through a series of stamps that are applied to the crops by the grower and can be traced from that point on. This is done to ensure not just the legality of the way this cannabis is used but in ensuring that the patients who need it are not being sold anything less than the real deal.

Related Post

This is the beginning of something that should lead, finally, to comprehensive regulations for the medical sector after years of failing to do so, including tracking requirements has started to grow. This has been done in partnership with the Swiss multinational security company, SICPA where Humboldt developed a cloud-based system for tracking cannabis, which was based on a model SICPA implemented with the state government to track cigarettes in 2005.

Each participating grower or manufacturer include in the program uses SICPA’s online platform to input information about their product into a distributed database, then attaches a coded stamp to each product, which can be scanned by county inspectors to look up the product’s origin and characteristics. This ensures that not only is the medical marijuana tracked and traced in every step of the delivery system between client and provider, but that it comes with a quality assurance that is utterly critical I a market as young as this and one that is still trying to get out of the shadow of the black market sales that have defined the industry for decades.

It may be a while before the system catches on in the rest of the country but, should it work as well as it promises to, no doubt we’ll be seeing more of it soon.

Guest

The writer of this post is a guest. Opinions in the article are solely of the writer and do not reflect The Merkle's view.

Share
Published by
Guest

Recent Posts

10 Trusted Cloud Mining Platforms to Earn Free Bitcoin Daily in 2026

  Cloud mining continues to gain massive traction as 2026 inches closer. In tough economic…

18 hours ago

Jupiter Pushes Onchain Finance Forward With Its Biggest Upgrade Wave Yet

Solana Breakpoint wasn’t just another conference this year. It doubled as a stage for Jupiter…

1 day ago

Ripple Payments Lands First European Bank With AMINA Bank AG

Ripple has scored a major regulatory milestone in Europe. AMINA Bank AG, a Swiss-regulated digital…

1 day ago

a16z’s 2026 Crypto Vision: Stablecoins Surge, Tokenization Grows, and Asia Becomes the Next Battleground

a16z just dropped its annual report, and the message is clear: crypto isn’t slowing down.…

2 days ago

Ethereum Activates BPO-1 Upgrade, Boosting Blob Capacity and Expanding the Network’s Scaling Roadmap

Ethereum has activated BPO-1, a protocol adjustment that increases blob capacity per block from 6…

2 days ago

CryptoBench: AI Meets DeFi, Head-On

CryptoBench just landed. Developed by ChainOpera AI and Princeton AI Lab, under the guidance of…

4 days ago