Greetings, welcome to the Aurora Cannabis Inc. Q3 2022 results conference call. At this time, all participants are in listen-only mode. A question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. Please note, participants are limited to one question at a time. If you would like to ask a follow-up question, please re-enter the queue. Should you require operator assistance during the conference, please press star and then zero on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to your host, Ananth Krishnan, Vice President of Corporate Development and Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.
Thank you, Denise, and we appreciate you all joining us this afternoon. With me today are CEO Miguel Martin and CFO Glen Ibbott. After the market closed, Aurora issued a news release announcing our financial results for the Q3 of fiscal 2022. The release and accompanying financial statements and management discussion and analysis are available on our IR website and via SEDAR and EDGAR databases. In addition, you can find the supplemental information deck on our IR website. Listeners are reminded that certain matters discussed on today's conference call could constitute forward-looking statements that are subject to risks and uncertainties related to our future financial or business performance. Actual results could differ materially from those anticipated in these forward-looking statements. The risk factors that may affect actual results are detailed in our annual information form and other periodic filings and registration statements.
These documents may be accessed via SEDAR and EDGAR. Following prepared remarks by Miguel and Glen, we will conduct a question-and-answer session for our analysts. However, we ask you to limit yourselves to one question and then return to the queue. With that, I will turn over the call to Miguel. Please go ahead.
Thank you, Ananth. In an environment defined by political upheaval, record-setting inflation, and market volatility, we are intent on controlling what we can control and delivering on our target of reaching a profitable adjusted EBITDA run rate by the H1 of fiscal 2023. In fact, I'm very pleased to tell you that our plan is working, and we're in better position to hit this goal than we were a quarter ago. The foundation of our confidence is our global medical cannabis business, which is both defensible and stable, with margins that exceed 60%. These are highly desirable characteristics in today's volatile economic environment. In addition to being the number one Canadian LP in terms of medical cannabis revenue over the last 12 months, the business continues to grow in other parts of the world, especially in Europe and Australia this quarter.
The second reason for our confidence is cost savings, and we're pleased to have identified additional opportunities. Recall from last quarter, we said we'd achieve the higher end of our targeted CAD 60 -CAD 80 million savings annually by the H1 of fiscal 2023. Today, we are announcing that we've identified an additional CAD 70 -CAD 90 million of savings within that same timeframe, for a total of CAD 150 -CAD 170 million of savings annually. Importantly, our total cost savings won't impact planned growth investments, but we expect them to materially reduce our cash needs. Our third reason is the balance sheet, which remains among the strongest in the industry and puts Aurora in a position of strength, particularly in challenging times.
We currently have approximately CAD 283 million in cash, inclusive of our early repurchase of CAD 141 million in convertible debt for further strategic and value-accretive opportunities, and about $190 million remaining under our ATM program. Fourth, Anandia, our science and innovation business, has one of the largest catalogs of high-quality genetics and IP in biosynthesis available for licensing. Anandia represents a capital-light, long-term revenue growth opportunity that we believe makes Aurora unique and can drive success by enabling our licensing partners to deliver a continuous stream of innovation to the market. Let's take a deeper dive on our medical business. During Q3, international medical revenue was up 55% compared to last year, but down from Q2 because of our large shipment to Israel last quarter, which we did not expect to recur this quarter.
As you know, predictability of revenue, especially in developing markets, can be affected by regulatory complexities such as timing of government approvals and import permits. We are currently selling medical cannabis products in seven EU countries, Germany, Malta, Poland, Czech Republic, U.K., Denmark, and France, and are either the market leader or in the top three in all of those countries. We estimate today there are around 150,000 patients in the EU. If it were to reach similar adoption levels as Canada, i.e., 1% of the population, the patient pool could expand to 3.5 million patients. In Poland, revenues grew threefold year-over-year as we followed up last quarter's record-breaking shipment with another strong quarter.
We have established a leadership position in the Polish flower market with an estimated 70% share and expect this success to continue as we launch new cultivars in Q3, accompanied by a marketing push. In the UK, our revenues increased 60% compared to Q3 last year. Growth was driven by a rapid increase in patient numbers as more evidence has come out and more physicians prescribe cannabis. While there is no reimbursement currently, which is a barrier to growth, we've not seen any pricing erosion. We are also preparing to launch extracts in Q4 and have already completed the first delivery to our import partners. In Germany, we had two of the top three best-selling products in dry flower for all of calendar 2021, and currently estimate we are No. 2 in market share.
Our market share has grown steadily in the extract markets, thanks to new product innovation. While growth in patient numbers is moderated due to slow prescriber adoption, Germany remains the largest market in the EU with 83 million citizens, and we are bullish given the new coalition's plans to legalize adult rec cannabis and improve medical patient accessibility. In France, we have completed three shipments to date for the pilot program, where we are the exclusive supplier of dry flower. Early estimates have us generating revenue as early as March 2023. In the Netherlands, we partner with one of 10 license holders to sell legally produced cannabis in approximately 10% of the country's coffee shops. The Netherlands is roughly half the size of Canada, which recall is a CAD 5 billion retail market, and like France, we expect sales here to begin in calendar 2023.
Finally, in Australia, our revenues rose 300% year-over-year, driven by record numbers of patients. Through our exclusive supply agreement with MedReleaf Australia, we offer medical patients an EU GMP certified range of products, including dry flower and recently released vapes. Let me reiterate that we believe that the cannabis growth story over the next several years will center on international medical and recreational. While the EU is currently a medical-only market, several governments have announced plans for recreational schemes, most notably Germany. The EU cannabis market is expected to be CAD 6 billion by 2025, and we expect to grab a sizable market share given our regulatory expertise, compliance protocols, testing, and science. These attributes will put us in the pole position for success. Turning now to the Canadian medical market, we not only have a competitive advantage, but our direct-to-consumer approach drives our industry-leading margins.
Overall revenue was mostly flat in Q3 compared to Q2, although our market share expanded 200 basis points to 26%. We attribute these share gains to the best-in-class patient, clinician, and physician service we offer, along with the launch of a number of premium products and innovation. Our insured patients made up 79% of our domestic medical sales, up from 73% in Q2. This is a key to stability, and we believe bodes well for the future. The infrastructure to acquire, retain, and move the patient through the process requires significant resources and experience. The truth is that a lot of that same infrastructure and know-how with patients in the Canadian market is directly applicable to our success in other key markets such as UK, Germany and France.
Regarding Canadian adult rec, our Q3 revenue reflects persistent macro challenges, including excess inventory and pressure on older SKUs. As we have said before, these dynamics are unsustainable, but we have the scale and resources to navigate through this industry consolidation. In the meantime, our focus remains on maximizing profitability by leveraging low-cost production and further rationalizing facilities that no longer make sense. We have also entered higher-margin categories. From April to July, we plan to launch 40 new products which we expect to benefit both rec and medical channels. These include our first infused pre-rolls and hash offerings, brand new cultivars from our breeding program, and a bevy of new vape, edible, and concentrate flavors. Our full year 2022 innovation calendar includes a significant number of new products, and we have established a regular cadence of new product innovations.
Finally, I want to conclude with our recent accretive acquisition of Thrive. Thrive is most widely known for its award-winning flagship recreational brand, Greybeard Cannabis Co., which was recognized as the number one brand recommended by Canadian budtenders in 2021. This transaction will place the talented management team from Thrive in charge of our Canadian rec business, which we expect will drive improvements in our cultivation practices and premium product offerings. This team have been able to build a profitable premium business with limited resources that will immediately contribute EBITDA to our bottom line. With that, I would now like to turn the call over to Glen.
Thank you, Miguel. Good afternoon, everyone. I'll start off with a few key highlights. We take pride in having one of the strongest balance sheets among Canadian LPs. At quarter end, we had CAD 480 million of cash and no term debt. During Q3, we repurchased CAD 13.4 million in principal on our 2024 convertible debt at a total cost of CAD 11.8 million, including accrued interest. In early May, we repurchased another CAD 128 million in principal on our convertible debt at a total cost of CAD 122.9 million, including accrued interest. As of today, we have $229 million of principal remaining on our convertible debt. We believe that debt reduction, even though maturity is still almost two years out, is a prudent and defensive capital allocation decision.
This debt reduction will save annual cash interest costs of CAD 8.5 million. Also, in early May, we closed the Thrive acquisition, for which we paid mostly cash, about CAD 26 million cash of the CAD 38 million price. We continue to have access to a shelf prospectus with $887.6 million US still available under it, including $187.6 million US remaining under our ATM program. As we have stated before, we don't need this capital for operating purposes, but consider it as available for strategic M&A and other value creation opportunities. Our cash flow continues to improve, with CAD 39.3 million used in operations and working capital in Q3 compared to CAD 66.2 million in the same period of last year.
Based on the additional targeted cost reductions in calendar 2022 that Miguel described, we expect cash flow to continue to improve. We are also progressing closer to our EBITDA positive milestone as we reduced our loss by CAD 8.6 million versus last year. However, compared to last quarter, our adjusted EBITDA loss increased by CAD 3.2 million. This is purely due to revenue differences, as I'll explain shortly, as gross margins remain strong and healthy and SG&A expenses continue to decline further as part of our business transformation plan. Q3 net cannabis revenue was CAD 50.4 million compared to CAD 60.6 million last quarter.
The change was mainly due to variable cadence from quarter to quarter of shipments to Israel, and partially due to lower consumer cannabis net revenue because of competitive pressures across the portfolio, coupled with retail store closures during the quarter in key provinces that impacted our premium offerings. Let me address each of our core businesses in a bit more detail. Canadian medical revenue was CAD 24.8 million in Q3, down slightly from Q2. As we have said previously, our Canadian medical patients fall into two groups, those with cost reimbursement and those without it. To build on what Miguel said earlier, we have purposefully repositioned our business to focus on the insured patient population, which should allow us to further improve our bottom line.
Our international medical revenue was CAD 14.6 million and reflected 55% growth versus the prior year, but a decrease of 26% sequentially. However, remember that Q2 revenue included approximately CAD 8.5 million in net sales to Israel. Excluding the impact of the Q2 Israeli sales, net international medical revenue increased sequentially by 29% and was driven by growth in important markets including Germany, Poland, U.K., and Australia. Taken together, our leading medical businesses in Canada and Europe performed well, as usual, generating CAD 39.4 million in sales and a gross margin of 64%, up slightly from the prior quarter. Medical represented about 78% of our Q3 revenue and almost 90% of our total Q3 gross profit.
This segment distinguishes us from our competitors, and the stability of the gross profit generated in these businesses is a critical component for us in reaching a positive EBITDA run rate by the end of the H1 of fiscal 2023. Our Q3 consumer revenue was CAD 10.3 million, which reflected a 28% decline compared to the last quarter. Consumer cannabis represented about 21% of our Q3 revenue and about 11% of our gross profit. As I mentioned before, the revenue decline is primarily attributed to price pressures across our portfolio and was exacerbated by COVID-related store closures in January that impacted our premium brands. It is important to note that even as our consumer cannabis net revenue fell, our consumer gross margin improved 600 basis points to 29% as we continue to shift towards a higher margin product portfolio.
In March, for the first time in our history, San Rafael '71 sales were greater than Daily Special revenue. This shift is important for our path to positive EBITDA, and combined with the acquisition of Thrive, we expect to see this move to premium margins accelerate. As an example of the importance of this shift, in Q3, despite revenue being off CAD 4 million quarter-over-quarter, gross profit was only down CAD 280 thousand. SG&A, which includes R&D, came in at CAD 42.3 million in Q3, and this included CAD 2.7 million in restructuring costs and prior period accruals. Excluding these costs, adjusted SG&A was CAD 39.5 million, our lowest level in almost four years, which was pre-adult use legalization.
While our SG&A is already well controlled, we are certainly not done with the efficiencies and expect to make significant additional progress as part of our updated targeted range for cost savings. Pulling all of this together, yes, we generated an adjusted EBITDA loss in Q3 2022 of CAD 12.3 million. The CAD 3.2 million change in adjusted EBITDA loss as compared to last quarter was primarily driven by the lower level of sales into Israel and was partially offset with a CAD 2.3 million decrease in adjusted SG&A expense. Now I'll give you a bit more color regarding our revised cost savings target of CAD 150 -CAD 170 million on an annualized basis.
We plan to have executed all of the necessary changes before the end of calendar 2022 and expect these savings to be evenly split between cost of goods sold and SG&A. They should be reflected in our P&L either as they occur over the next three quarters for SG&A savings or as inventory is drawn down following production-related savings. Of course, all of it positively impacts our cash flow as the changes are executed. Today's announcement of the closure of our Aurora Sky facility in Edmonton is part of our business transformation plan. This decision is in keeping with our strategy in the Canadian adult rec market to focus on higher margin premium categories and to move away from purposefully producing for the low to no margin categories.
We are working toward a leaner, more agile operating model that is expected to provide strong upward EBITDA leverage as future revenues increase. Resulting from these strategic business transformation changes, we recorded a number of one-time non-cash accounting charges in Q3. Goodwill in the Canadian market segment was written down completely, a charge of $741.7 million . We recorded specific asset impairments of a $176.1 million And an inventory provision charge of $63.6 million . Summing up, there are three key takeaways from my financial review of Q3 2022. First, our balance sheet remains strong, supported by a healthy cash balance, reduced convertible debt levels, and improving working capital and cash flow. Second, our medical businesses in Canada and internationally provide us with a competitive advantage and are critical to us generating sustainable profitability.
It's worth noting, we generate more gross profit from our medical cannabis businesses than any of our Canadian LP competitors do from their entire cannabis businesses. Finally, we've worked hard to increase the target range for cost savings. These are expected to have material positive impact to our bottom line and cash flow, and reflect the leaner operating model that positions us well for future growth. Thanks for your interest in Aurora. I'll now turn the call back to Miguel.
Thanks, Glen. Before Q&A, let me share some final takeaways. We expect to achieve a positive adjusted EBITDA run rate by the end of the H1 of fiscal 2023. Second, our medical cannabis business continues to be a smart business to invest behind, particularly in an environment of war in Europe, high inflation, and possible recession. It has defensible characteristics, high margins, and in our view, no one does it better, both domestically and internationally. Third, we expect the rec market in Canada to correct, and when that process is complete, we will have added opportunity for market share and pricing. Our focus in the meantime is rationalizing our footprint and driving cost efficiencies. Fourth, our science and innovation program adds another capital-light opportunity to our portfolio, and our strong balance sheet positions us for continued organic growth and strategic M&A.
On that note, we have already demonstrated considerable patience and discipline in evaluating acquisitions, seeking targets that not only fit strategically, but are also rationally priced. Accretive M&A is a vital part of our plan going forward, and we believe we're in a great position to create shareholder value over time. In closing, we're delivering on our stated goals, most notably our business transformation plan, which is squarely on track. We appreciate your time and interest today. We're energized for the rest of the year, and now I'll turn it over to the operator to open the lines for questions.
Thank you, sir. At this time, we will be conducting a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star and then one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star and then two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star key. As a reminder, participants are limited to one question at a time. The first question we have is from Michael Lavery from Piper Sandler. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Good evening.
Evening, Michael.
It's no surprise to see Aurora Sky finally get closed all the way. I think it has capacity several times what you're selling at the moment. It's a big facility. It was sort of a showpiece of the portfolio for a while. How much of the incremental sales are driven by that? Is that really the majority? Is it all of it? Is it just one of several pieces? And a little bit related to that, to understand how the savings flow through, could you maybe touch on the sequential deterioration in EBITDA margins from last quarter to this one? I know it's always a little bit lumpy, but what were some of the drivers there and how much of that is, you know.
How should we think about the savings really hitting fiscal 2023 versus starting to see them in the Q4 this year?
Sure. Let me kick off on sort of a top-line point, and then I'll let Glen go into some of the modeling points. You know, Michael, I think as you're well aware, and many people are aware, that these massive facilities that were built, you know, particularly in Canada, you know, really were built with this idea that you could grow cannabis, particularly flower, you know, in Canada and ship it all around the world, including the U.S. and parts of Eastern Europe. That was, you know, obviously has not come to be. Secondly, you know, consumers very quickly evolved into, you know, being very discerning. We're seeing that not only in Canada, but we're also seeing it in the U.S., and we're starting to see it as well in Western Europe.
These massive facilities that employed a significant amount of automation just were not, you know, built for purpose for this environment. One of the things I think I would mention here is Aurora has been very aggressive in proactively rightsizing the company for what it needs. Most recently, as we've announced, you know, Aurora Sky was down to about 25% capacity. The carrying costs on fixed and what that means across your system was just untenable. We did everything we could to try to find locations to be able to sell that type of flower cannabis, and it just didn't work. I think, you know, that should be an indication, I think, to everybody that we will continue to make the tough decisions that we need to make in order to have the proper, you know, sort of overall footprint.
Secondly, when you have such a complicated network with facilities all over Canada, it creates a lot of excess cost in the overall sort of simplicity of that system. There's added benefits, not just because of the carrying cost of Aurora Sky, but also to the simplification, you know, with the closure of other facilities that we've announced as well, which then will have a significant impact overall. You know, I think those are all sort of important points. I mean, Glen, do you want to grab the second part of Michael's question in terms of the flow-through? Just the one thing I will mention, Michael, is that we're really proud of how quick and how fast these savings are going to hit our balance sheet, and it's. I think you'll see them quite quickly.
Glen, if you could talk about the modeling and the timing.
Yeah, sure, Mike. The initial tranche of savings that we announced last year that we're pretty much getting towards the end of executing were mainly driven by operational centralization. For instance, Polaris was just finally shuttered in April, and the manufacturing lines that have been moved back east are just up and running now. Sorry, external noise here. The timing on those, you should start seeing a lot of that, the positive impact on cash flows starting to come through in the next quarter. Now, this additional tranche of savings that we've announced is a combination of both shuttering of some facilities that Miguel talked about and SG&A cost reduction. It's about 50/50 on that additional tranche of savings.
The SG&A cost reductions are expected to be executed over the next couple of quarters, so we'll see them hitting immediately. The SKU reduction, I mean, our current plan is to have SKU shut down by the end of summer. I think the next couple of quarters will be telling in terms of cash flow savings. Obviously, the production side, as it hits our cost of goods, takes a quarter or two to flow through following that. We expect to see the margin improvement coming through towards the you know the last quarter of the calendar year, maybe even a little bit in our September quarter as well. That's. We haven't really seen it, Mike, impact other than the SG&A savings.
We haven't really seen the stuff impact our financials yet, but it's coming.
I mean, Michael, one other point I'd make is, you know, for example, closing Sky will save us CAD 7 million a quarter in cash savings. It's significant.
Okay, great. Thanks so much.
You're welcome.
Thank you. The next question we have is from Andrew Carter from Stifel. Please go ahead.
Yeah, thanks. Good afternoon. I just wanna ask, you've upgraded the target by CAD 90 million. Your adjusted EBITDA loss was CAD 12 million in the quarter. Multiply that by 4, CAD 48 million dollar loss. You got CAD 90 million dollars of cost savings. Are you saying that we should be getting to a CAD 40 million dollar EBITDA run rate that's not even including Thrive and or the tail end of the old savings? I just wanna make sure I'm squaring and thinking this correctly. Thank you.
Glen, you wanna walk through the staging, and then I'll talk about how to think about the timing?
Sure. I think.
No, no timing, guys. I was actually saying, is that just an out of bounds absolute number to think about? That 90 plus a CAD 48 million annualized loss, 45 over the next 2 years? Thanks.
I'm having a little trouble following your question there. Our SG&A, we expect to take it down on a quarterly basis below 30%. We expect our margins to continue to be where they're at or improve over time through the centralization, just more efficiencies coming out of the operation. In between the two, as you can see, taking our SG&A down from roughly the 40% that it's at now down below 30% is gonna take us most of the way on the cost reduction that we need to get to positive EBITDA, even without depending on revenue growth.
Yeah. I mean, Andrew, what I would. The only piece I'd add is if you took Q3 and you made the presumption, particularly as it pertains to gross profit and adjusted EBITDA, what the rec business is up to, and you, I think, presume a bit of steadiness to the other two pieces of business, and you drop the, you know, SG&A savings that Glen just mentioned, you're there. I don't think it flips to a +40, and I would not want to profess that, but that's sort of the back of the envelope math on why I think people should have some confidence in the adjusted EBITDA target.
Okay. Thank you.
Thank you.
Ladies and gentlemen, just a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star and then one now. The next question we have is from Vivien Azer from Cowen. Please go ahead.
Hi, good afternoon. This is actually Victor Ma on for Vivien Azer, and thank you for taking the questions.
Of course, Victor. How are you?
Good. How are you? How are you?
Good.
Given the recent comments by Germany's health and finance ministers on accelerating adult use
Legalization, can you frame the adult use opportunity there and offer your thoughts on the timing? Can you also offer some color on how you look to leverage your current competitive position in the medical market to approach the opportunity there? Thank you.
Sure. I'd be happy to. You know, I think that the first thing with all of these countries, you know, whether it's Germany or whether it's the Netherlands, or you pick any of these EU countries, it's a similar regulatory framework in terms of the regulators. They start with production, then they get into manufacturing protocols, then all the EU GMP and the different pieces of it. Those companies that have had success, and we're clearly one of them, in Germany will have the inside line on rec. You know, the folks that are making that decision are the folks that were involved in medical. To be, you know, I think we were a bit pleased with the, you know, the speed in which that announcement was being made.
It's really hard to pick timing in this, but it doesn't change your strategic sort of approach because everything that you're doing for medical will apply to what we hope is a quick, you know, rec turnaround. You know, you talked a little bit about modeling. Right now, the percentage of the adult population in Germany that's using cannabis is one-tenth that at 0.1% as what we see in Canada. I think if you multiply that times the population, I think you can see the possible upside. But I think the thing we're most pleased about is we've had very productive conversation with the regulators and, you know, a very conservative, compliant approach, particularly on the production side, where Germany has boded, you know, well for us.
One of these little nuance about Germany that, you know, I'll share as to why it's so hard, their deviation provision on potency is only 10%. Most places in the world will allow a 20% deviation to label. While you might have a 25 potency product, and you say, "Well, Miguel, that gives you plenty of sort of buffer at 2.5," balanced products are becoming quite popular. In many cases, they'll have a 10% THC number, which only gives you a 1% variation, which is a very difficult challenge for Germany. We think the leaders in Germany, and as I said, we're one of them, will have the inside line when that goes rec, and we think it'll be substantive.
We also would point out that there are a lot of eyes on Germany as the largest economy currently looking at it. We think if they do go, it's gonna have a halo effect on the other markets around that look at them from a regulatory standpoint.
Thank you. The next question we have is from John Zamparo from CIBC World Markets.
Thanks. Good afternoon. I wanted to ask about M&A, especially following the Thrive acquisition. It seems as though companies in the space are generally more capital constrained than in the past, and they're seeing valuations compress more. Does that give you more appetite to be active on acquisitions? Keeping in mind you're going to look for human capital and, you know, brands that have connected, but is there any appetite to maybe accelerate the M&A strategy at this point?
Yeah. I mean, John, it's a great question. You know, there's really been sort of two areas of M&A activity. One is the U.S., and, you know, I think we've been on record about, you know, our play in the U.S., which is, you know, a really clear one, that everything that we're doing around the world is going to have, you know, access points to the U.S. with an FDA regulation and with a, you know, a thoughtful sort of approach. You know, I think we've been smart about not chasing in the U.S. on those really high valuations around them.
The second piece is what you're mentioning is around Canada and, you know, the sort of question about, you know, what type of companies do you go after and with this, you know, credit markets, you know, what do you get there? I've really seen the dynamic nature of the business and gaining market share and buying companies just for their market share really is not, I think, a positive approach. To the point you're making, human capital does make a significant difference. We are interested in finding, you know, teams that are really thoughtful, that are margin accretive, and that are focused on sustainably making money.
Thrive was one of those teams, and I think, you know, different than others, you know, it was my intent to find a great high functioning team and then put them in charge of our rec business. The CEO of that company, Geoff Hoover, who's a wonderful talent with his team, they're now going to run our Canadian rec business. Not only I think they'll do that at a high level, but also, they bring a significant amount of innovation and genetics that we can plug both into our rec business, our international medical business and our domestic Canadian business. You know, as Glen mentioned, we've got a lot of flexibility on the balance sheet, and I think as things get tighter, access to capital is a key strategic advantage, for any company, but particularly cannabis company.
As things get, you know, more affordable and make more sense, we would be there, particularly, you know, possibly around medical assets. We really, you know, without being too boastful, consider ourselves to be one of the best, if not the best, international medical cannabis company out there. You know, those type of things are of unique interest to us.
Thank you, sir. The next question we have is from Andrew Bond from Jefferies.
Hi, good evening. Andrew Bond on the line for Owen Bennett. Thanks for taking our questions.
Of course, Andrew.
Just around Israel, definitely appreciate timing of shipments can be lumpy but.
You know, the market still looks like it's going well. Just wanted to see if you could give a little more detail around how you see shipments trending for the rest of the year, if there's been any shipments since the end of the quarter to date. Thank you.
Yeah. I'd be happy to. I have spent a lot of time in Israel, and I really have the honor of having worked in Israel a lot in my career. I was most recently there a couple months ago. The situation with Israel is an interesting one. First and foremost, I think you have one of the most progressive and thoughtful regulators globally, a very smart and thoughtful gentleman named Yuval Landschaft, who runs what's called the IMCA, and they're the regulator of cannabis in Israel. You're starting to see, you know, a lot of interest, and obviously many of our competitors, you know, are shipping Canadian flower into Israel and have done that successfully. You're also seeing a significant growth of local growers in Israel that are becoming successful, growing their own cannabis.
I don't need to name the name of my competitors, but I was there, and I've seen many of those grows and been respectful of that. What you're seeing is in a country of 9 million people with about 130,000 patients, that there is probably more supply than demand currently of good to great quality cannabis. While it is always a challenge to navigate the very sort of high bar of the IMCA to get products into Israel, there is also now the internal pressure of having local grows, you know, putting out high quality flower, particularly into that market. You know, we've said to everybody that when we have a shipment to Israel, we will announce it. In that statement, we have not had one yet this quarter.
What I will say is that the international market beyond Israel, it does go hot and cold as these regs are there. You know, when you have a diversified business like we do, and you can offset, you know, shipments that didn't happen to Israel, you know, with shipping the largest shipment anyone's ever shipped into Poland or in the Czech Republic or the significant growth you have, that we have in Australia, you're able to balance out, that. I understand, you know, from an analyst standpoint, it's hard not seeing that regular cadence, into a market as important as Israel. We think, you know, that when you have such breadth internationally, overall it's gonna smooth out. We've been pretty good at, you know, at guiding towards how we think our international medical business is gonna do.
That's without some of the new, you know, markets that are coming online. You know, that's sort of it on Israel and I have great respect for what's going on there. I think Israel, beyond a place to sell, Canadian cannabis, will be a leader in genetics, in seed propagation, and starting at some point in export. You know, I'm hopeful for that. Obviously there's a long history in Israel with biotech. We're bullish, we're active in Israel. We just, you know, at this point don't have a shipment to tell you about.
Thank you. The next question we have is from Frederico Gomes from ATB Capital Markets.
Yeah. Good afternoon again, Glen. Thanks for taking my question. Just, you know, with the asset rationalization that you're doing right now, closing Sky, you know, could you remind us about the facilities that you have left right now? You know, what's the capacity there in terms of cultivation? How much of that capacity are you currently utilizing in this? As well, you know, what are your plans for Sky? You know, are you looking for a buyer for this asset? You know, does Canada even have a market for selling facility that size given the conditions that we're seeing right now? Also, some of your other facilities as well that you plan to close. Thank you.
Sure. You got it. I'll go as a top line overview, and I'll let Glen correct me if I go astray in terms of the exact numbers on production quantities by facility. Our primary facilities, you know, are River and Ridge. They are historical facilities. They produce extremely high quality cannabis. As we focus on premium products both domestically, internationally, rec and medical, they are proven facilities, both with historical cultivars and new cultivars. We also retain the Whistler facility in BC, that we all know produces, you know, some of the highest quality organic craft cannabis that has always done very well.
Staying in the Canadian market, we also are thrilled with what we get with the Thrive acquisition, both, you know, a tremendous indoor grow and a focus on concentrates, as well as a significantly important outdoor grow that has a wonderful cost of goods impact, particularly on fresh grows and for extracts and concentrates. Internationally, we have a facility in Germany that we talked about. We also have our Nordic facility, as well as our partnership in the Netherlands. We feel confident that both in our internal network as well as the partnerships that we have with others, that we have more than what we need in terms of current demand with a proper sort of fixed cost.
In terms of, you know, overall, sort of when you look at all that in terms of disposition, you know, it's my expectation that, you know, that Edmonton market, particularly around that airport authority, that Sky, you know, will have a great buyer and we'll obviously work with our business partners both at the municipal level, like we have with the Polaris facility. The same thing would happen. Valley is in a tremendous location from agriculture, and there'll be no issues in terms of finding a great buyer there. You know, we'll have to see what happens from CROs and others on interest in Anandia. Glen, you wanna talk a bit about maybe production quantities or clean the rest up.
Yeah. Yeah
Yeah. Yeah, Fred. I mean, we have disclosed before the capacity of, like, River, Ridge, Whistler, etc. Then they run in the neighborhood, sort of like, I guess, stated capacity at River, about 30,000 kilograms a year. Ridge, about 5,000 kilograms a year. Whistler is in about the 2,000 kilograms a year range. More importantly, that's total, well, total biomass. What we've been focused on in cultivation and getting more and more expertise is obviously the yield and pass rates at specs. If we're producing a 25% flower, you know, you want all your batches to be hitting 25% flower, or it certainly falls in value. One of the reasons that we're really focusing in River and Ridge is the exceptional pass rates.
Just hitting high levels of THC on a consistent basis, sometimes 100% of the batches in a particular period will be hitting there. That's all really important for producing high quality flowers. It's great to state 30,000 kilograms. You know, our focus has been getting, you know, as much as possible at 30,000 to meet the high-quality specifications. What we're thrilled about with the Thrive team is this is, like, they're one of the best brands in Canada, and that's really obvious when you look at the company and their performance. What's under the covers is just exceptional expertise in the cultivation side. You know, the cultivar selection and your growing techniques, a very scientific method, but backed up by decades of legacy growing experience.
You get some folks that kind of came over as part of that team that are getting yields sometimes, you know, twice what we've been getting of the high-quality stuff. We're excited to see even more coming out of our River and Ridge. We think we've got plenty of capacity there. As far as it goes in Europe, I think you're asking about whether we could use the capacity there. In fact, we're starting to be concerned about capacity constraints in a couple of years, and it's not a problem. We've got expansion capability there, and we certainly can continue to export from Canada. I'd put it, you know, in the other. Don't fall asleep on the European opportunity there.
We need everything we can get out of our European facilities, and we're still going to need to supply from Canada over the next couple of years. No problems with the international facilities at all.
Thank you, sir. The next question we have is from Matt Bottomley from Canaccord Genuity. Please go ahead.
Good evening. Thanks for taking the questions. I just wanted to go back to one of the questions. I think Andrew was asking just about the change in the increase in the anticipated savings. Apologies, towards just the end there, my line was cutting out, but I think I caught most of it. You know, the guidance on reaching a run rate of positive EBITDA hasn't changed, but you're adding at the midpoint about, you know, CAD 90 million of savings. You know, I understand that, you know, from a standpoint of what you previously telegraphed, maybe that's sort of breakeven by sort of the midpoint of adjusted EBITDA.
Adding those CAD 90 million of savings in, when you say annualized, is that, you know, the last month or the last week of that particular point in time, let's call it midway through fiscal 2023, when that will be achieved, and then the actual cash part of it will be lagging? Or are we expecting some sort of step function increase into the adjusted EBITDA at that point in time, given the significant increase in these initiatives?
Glen, you want to start? Yeah, I'll start to unpack that a little bit. The way when we say annualized run rate, we're making a series of decisions, some of them happening today, some of them happening in June, and then et cetera, through the summer and things. To execute, say, the shutdown facility obviously takes a number of months. What we're targeting is that by the time we get to Q2, all the decisions are done, the facilities are shuttered that are set to be shuttered, and everything's been executed so that we're running at a rate that is EBITDA positive and that these savings have been captured by then.
Looking forward, I think is the right way to look at this on a run rate basis, annualized, those are the savings. How it differs from before is we've resized this to get to positive EBITDA even at current revenue. If we took our Q3 revenue for CAD 50 million, just to be dead certain we can hit this EBITDA target, we said, "What do we need to do to the business to make sure that even at a rate like this, which we don't expect to persist, but even at a rate like this, what would it take to be EBITDA positive?" It's a bigger step than we've taken before. A lot of this shows up in cash savings. Why we're telling you the big number is that's all cash savings.
Obviously, when you cut it out of operational savings, Miguel mentioned Sky, you know, at CAD 7 million a quarter. There's almost CAD 30 million annually of cash savings by shuttering that facility. That's, I think, you know, if you want to think about the sort of run rate here, we've got a couple of quarters of continuing hard work to execute all these savings. But we've got an exceptionally crisp plan, and we're executing on it. Yeah, cost of goods, obviously the margins will start to improve, we would expect, over time. There's definitely headwinds in the market. You know that, inflation, et cetera, et cetera. But we think we're gonna at least cover that, if not more, through these cost rationalizations.
The SG&A cuts would get us to positive EBITDA in a quarter that looks like Q3. Yeah. I guess the other couple points I would make is, one is, you know, while you hate to do these things, this is a team that has a bit of experience now doing it. It's also a team with some new leaders in place that come, you know, from a background, whether that's our new head of operations, who comes from Kraft and P&G, or our new head of HR, who comes from Holt Renfrew and AmEx
There, you know, this is a different management team that's running through this. The second part is, you know, we're gonna continue to give updates as best we see it. I understand why some people might say, "Well, Miguel, geez, I understand these enhanced savings, why wouldn't you increase or raise your guidance overall?" I'm a bit sensitive to the, you know, the history of the company saying it's gonna do something, particularly around profitability and savings and not getting there. Now, Glen's right in talking about the structural differences of this based upon the current revenue. You know, that's why I wanna see a little bit of the execution. I wanna see a little bit of the timing. It's a bit of a, you know, a wonky time period with inflation and some other aspects going on.
If we get closer with greater clarity, of course, we'll be transparent. I think people know that. We wanna be, you know, a bit conservative here in terms of how we provide guidance on this, because I am sensitive to how people have looked at historical statements on the company.
Thank you, sir. Our final question comes from Doug Miehm from RBC Capital Markets.
Yeah, thank you. I just wanted to go back to this so that I'm sure I understand Aurora Sky. It's operating at 25% capacity today. I'm just curious then, what is it making? And what are the revenues roughly coming out of that site? And is it losing CAD 10 million-CAD 20 million a year or even more by the sounds of it?
Doug, I mean, put up with this little history bit. Sky was originally created, as many people on this call know better than I, to be the one of the largest global automated, almost completely automated facilities to grow what I would call mid-tier flower. The reason that was okay, because at that time, a 16 or 18 potency product was more than acceptable for the Canadian market and for some other markets. As the consumer evolved very quickly, bud quality, density, moisture, all of those things, and then potency and terps and all these other sort of core character attributes, did not lend itself to automation. We're not the only one that sort of talked about that. Sky had to be retrofitted very rapidly.
As you might imagine, a facility of that nature has a different sort of, you know, profile genetically of cultivars that do well. When you couple the rapid sort of expansion of what a consumer wanted, and particularly in the rec business, and with the need for new cultivars, scale of that size became a bit of an impediment. We pivoted Sky and made massive improvements, and absolute kudos to the folks that work there, in order to find a home for that product, particularly internationally, where you'd have higher margins that, you know, would sustain the overall fixed cost of that facility. As you might imagine, whether it's utility costs, whether it's maintenance, whether it's all of those things that were created under a, you know, past sort of scenario, Sky became really untenable.
We took it down to 25%. Yes, it was losing, you know, a significant amount of money as we had to allocate the overall cost of that facility against the product that was created there, which was almost entirely flower. As flower prices, particularly in the rec market, cratered for everybody, it became this ongoing piece. You know, when Israel particularly became a little bit more, I would say, less consistent, you know, it really became untenable. When overall we took our rec business down to what we think is sustainable, in terms of focus on premium, it just didn't make sense. That's really how we got to where we got to.
I think, you know, we've been pretty proactive in reducing our footprint, whether that was Sky, whether that was previously with Sun and Valley and others, and we continue to do what I think most would say is the right thing for the business to have the right cost structure overall for the amount of cannabis we need. Lastly is, as you see an expansion into other items, concentrate, infused pre-rolls, vapes, ingestibles in the Canadian market, massive facilities just producing flower just don't make sense to the tune of, you know, millions and millions of dollars of losses if you keep them open.
Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, we have reached the end of our question-and-answer session, and I would like to turn the call back to Miguel Martin for closing remarks. Please go ahead, sir.
Well, Fang, I wanna thank everybody for taking the time to continue to listen to the Aurora story. We've never been more confident about the targets we have in front of us. Hopefully, people understand we continue to make the tough calls based on what we think is right for the shareholders. If you look at the balance sheet, if you look at our core cannabis business, which is international medical, they've never been stronger. We're excited about the quarters ahead, and we appreciate all of your coverage and interest in Aurora. Thank you very much.
Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today's conference. Thank you for joining us. You may now disconnect your lines.