MANUFACTURING
Medicinal Cannabis Vault, Warehouse and Dispatch

Wholesaling Medical Marijuana / Medicinal Cannabis products
If you are cultivating and / or manufacturing medical marijuana / medicinal cannabis products, then you will be supplying them to pharmacies. dispensaries or other outlets either in Australia or overseas markets like Germany or Canada.
Wholesale Cannabis Distribution of Pharmaceutical grade medicinal cannabis
The process of storing, supplying or exporting medicinal products (but not supplying products to the public) is called the wholesale distribution of medicinal products. This process is also regulated due to its potential impact on product quality.
You can imagine the potential risk to your medicinal product if it is stored next to corrosive cleaning products, pesticides in a warehouse or left in a hot truck for hours or days. There’s also the risk of theft or tampering if someone sees your clearly labelled medical marijuana / medicinal cannabis product on the back of a truck, on its way to your customers.
If you hold a Licence to Manufacture (GMP) to manufacture medical marijuana / medicinal cannabis products issued by a competent authority, the licence covers every step up to and including the supply of the medicine to the point of release for supply. This includes warehousing and distribution. The competent authority like the FDA, MHRA or TGA will expect you to follow Good Wholesaling Practice (GWP) / Good Distribution Practice.
Medicinal Cannabis Vault, Marijuana Wholesale Warehouses & Dispatch Stages
GMP and GDP for cannabis businesses include the following aspects:
- Buildings & grounds
- Personnel
- Stock handling and stock control
- Inwards goods
- Damaged goods from stock
- Returned goods from customers
- Returns goods – from a product recall
- Transport of your products
- Customer complaints
- Records
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Who can help you start your medicinal cannabis business?
PharmOut’s cannabis consultants can assist you with licensing applications, medicinal marijuana processing and regulatory requirements for GMP / EU GMP (PIC/S).
Our pharmaceutical facility design architects, cleanroom validation, testing and processing engineers are experts in assisting cultivators and medicinal cannabis manufacturers with environmentally minded designs for efficiency and GMP compliance. Contact PharmOut with your enquiry or view the medicinal cannabis cultivation support pages.
Let’s look at a couple of these aspects of Wholesale distribution of Medicinal Cannabis in more detail
Buildings and Grounds – Warehousing
The design of your warehouse can have a big impact on the efficiency of your product dispatch processes. A good design can minimize the time spent locating product in the warehouse, packaging it and shipping it. This translates to lower labour costs for you and less potential for product loss or damage.
You need to consider future growth and how to minimize the size of your warehouse (and the associated costs) by using an efficient design. Just to illustrate how important this is, a major pharmaceutical manufacturer in Australia ‘lost’ $1 million worth of product in their warehouse. It wasn’t located until after the product’s expiration date. Ouch!
Storage Facility Designs / Wholesale Medicinal Cannabis Distribution Warehouse
You need to consider the following when planning/selecting your storage facility / medicinal cannabis distribution warehouse:
- Temperature and humidity control – you need to know how to store your product(s) to ensure they maintain their quality until the expiry date
- Cleanliness – you must have processes in place to ensure the warehouse remains clean and tidy. Auditors will be looking for things like pest control and documented cleaning processes.
- Storage solutions – you may need to cater for different products that are used at different rates. You don’t want your warehouse staff having to pull out stock that is used infrequently, just to access the more popular products.
- Separate storage areas – if an auditor walks into your warehouse and sees non-medicinal products (e.g., cleaning supplies) stored next to your medicines they won’t be happy. You need to have separate areas for the storage of your medicinal products and other goods.
- Storing materials at from different stages of your product’s lifecycle – raw materials, final products and returned products must all be considered in the design of your warehouse.
Secure storage areas
For example, the Australian Office of Drug Control requires that you have a secure storage area if you have a licence to produce medicinal cannabis / medical marijuana. There may be a similar requirement if you hold a state-based poisons licence.
A vault is a walk-in safe where you keep reference samples, as well as stability testing samples and if needed; rejected or returned samples, including those associated with a product recall. Depending on your situation, you may not need a bank-like vault, but you should seek advice on what sort of secure storage area you should have.
Records
Using a software system to manage inventory is almost essential. The Australian Office of Drug Control expects all licence holders to keep records of all the activity relating to the source, supply, storage and destruction of medicinal cannabis. You must be able to account for everything you’ve produced (and who you shipped it to), including product that went to waste.
Note that if you are manufacturing product (and thus have a TGA licence to do so) all software must be compliant with the 21 CFR Part 11 / Annex 11 regulations (read a Blog post about selecting Seed to Sale software). You will find it much easier to prepare the quarterly reports the TGA requires on the quantities of medicinal cannabis you have sourced, supplied, stored and destroyed if you have an inventory management system in place.
Transport of your medicinal cannabis products
Shipping your product to your customers is another important part in the supply chain. Good Wholesaling Practice requires that you ensure that your products are transported under the labelled storage conditions. You must have data that shows you have validated your product’s transportation to your customers. This data must prove that the product was maintained at the correct temperature, humidity etc to ensure its quality at the point of supply to the final consumer.
Part of that validation process is a risk assessment – what are the things that might go wrong and impact the quality of your product? This might be things like transport delays, failure of monitoring devices, contamination from other products or extreme weather events.
Based on the risk assessment you will then gather data from the transportation of your product to prove that the risks are managed. This means that you can’t ship product with any old courier. You must have contracts with logistics companies that define their responsibilities in terms of ensuring you’re the conditions your product must be kept in. Auditors may ask to see these contracts.