SPIEGEL ONLINE - November 22, 2006, 03:49 PM
URL: http://www.spiegel.de/international/0,1518,450078,00.html

INTERNATIONAL COCAINE CONSUMPTION
New York Blows Away the Competition

By Markus Becker

Researchers have been scouring rivers in Europe and the US for traces of
cocaine consumption. The result: Cocaine use is probably much greater
than previously assumed -- and New Yorkers are the biggest coke-heads of
all.

The world's biggest coke heads live in New York.
DDP

Last year, a study instigated by SPIEGEL ONLINE made big headlines:
Experts had foraged Germany's rivers for a substance produced by the
human body during cocaine consumption, and the results were bountiful.
The extrapolated numbers revealed, among other things, that residents
around the river Rhine's drainage basin near Düsseldorf consume roughly
11 tons of cocaine each year. The street value: around €1.64 billion.

Now the experts at Nuremberg's Institute for Biomedical and
Pharmaceutical Research (IBMP) have expanded their method to other EU
countries and the US. The results are similar to those of 2005: Previous
official estimates for cocaine use, which rely heavily on police
statistics, are apparently way too low.

For example in New York, IBMP teams searched the Hudson River and found
the by-products of a projected cocaine consumption totaling 16.4 tons
per year. There are approximately 3.4 million people aged 15 to 65
living in the Hudson's watershed. According to the United Nations "World
Drug Report," 2.8 percent of Americans in this age group use cocaine at
least once a year. That would mean that about 95,000 people are
responsible for an annual consumption of 16.4 tons of pure cocaine -- a
per capita rate of 172 grams per year.

Strong variations

But the "World Drug Report" says the average user, at least in Central
and Western Europe, consumes only 35 grams of pure cocaine per year.
Unless the appetite of the average American is considerably greater,
present estimates of overall consumption are likely to be too low.
Either there are more coke-heads than reflected by the official
statistics, or they snort far more Charlie per year than yet realized.

And there's more. IBMP Director Fritz Sörgel says there are a number of
further lessons provided by his study:

   * Good news for Germany -- cocaine consumption has, according to his
data -- stagnated.

   * New York continues its reign as the Cocaine Capital of the World.
One is almost tempted to upbraid them for wasting the stuff. Nowhere did
researchers find as much pure cocaine as they did in the Hudson River.

   * Europe is catching up in cocaine consumption, with Spain bravely
leading the way. The British and Italians also display a ravenous
appetite for blow.

The details vary, though, from city to city. In Washington's Potomac,
IBMP chemists found traces of an annual per capita consumption of 73
grams of cocaine, while the San Francisco Bay indicates an annual use of
little more than 40 grams per person.

In Europe, the pattern is similar. According to current estimates by the
European Union, about 1 percent of Germany's 18 to 59-year-old
population consumes cocaine at least once a year. Based on the IBMP
measurements, that would mean that the average cocaine user in Nuremberg
consumes a mere six grams per year, while in Mannheim the number is
closer to 55 grams.

Fritz Sörgel, the director of the IBMP, says the significant
discrepancies between individual measurements are the result of two
factors. First, the researchers obtained their samples on different
times of the year and at different times of the day. Second, the
measurements were not always performed at the same distance to the
sewage works. They did not take the samples directly at the purification
plants, where the by-product benzoylecgonine is broken down by about 80
percent, but instead examined the water after its discharge back into
the river. Depending on the distance to its point of re-entry, the water
from the sewage treatment plant is more (or less) diluted by the rest of
the river water.

"Reliable Overall Picture"

"But the multitude of measurements at different seasons and times of the
day and at different distances to the points of entry should result in a
reliable overall picture," says Sörgel. Furthermore, the results in the
US, Germany, Spain, Italy, the UK, the Netherlands, Austria and the
Czech Republic roughly mirrors established country rankings.

"We are not yet dealing with an established scientific method for the
exact determination of national cocaine consumption," Sörgel stressed in
an interview with SPIEGEL ONLINE. His team is merely taking first steps
to provide a scientific basis for the current surveys.

Indeed, an opportunity to compare results is not far off: the European
drug administration EMCDDA will present its latest annual report in
Brussels on Thursday. But such estimates based on polls have one crucial
weakness: Since cocaine is an illegal drug, the results from voluntary
surveys are usually skewed well below reality. Heavy consumers in
particular are difficult to reach with this method and show "a tendency
to understatement," writes Germany's Federal Office of Criminal
Investigation (BKA) in its "2004 Federal Situation Report on Narcotics."
Authorities should therefore expect "a not insignificant understatement
of the actual numbers" in such surveys.

How big? The answer may be in the rivers.

Related SPIEGEL ONLINE links:
Cocaine Use in Germany: Mountains of Coke along the Rhine (11/11/2005)
http://www.spiegel.de/international/0,1518,384456,00.html

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