Abstract

The production of illicit drugs contributes to important environmental harms. In the European context, the production of synthetic drugs, particularly MDMA and amphetamine (and more recently methamphetamine), increasingly poses environmental challenges. The production of these substances in Europe is mainly concentrated in the Netherlands and to a lesser extent in Belgium. In this contribution we focus on the Belgian case, particularly in Flanders—the Belgian region where synthetic drug production has been more present. The goals of our analysis are 1) to document the presence of illicit synthetic drug production and dumping of chemical waste material in that region, 2) to explore the media coverage of environmental harms associated with those activities, and 3) to identify the range of reported environmental harms. We draw on data from the Belgian Federal Police and on an analysis of 289 news articles published in selected Flemish newspapers (2013–2020). The findings indicate that although there is an increasing trend in the presence of synthetic drug production and dumping sites in Belgium, the details on the nature and extent of environmental harms are often unknown. Besides difficulties around detecting certain types of dumping events, there are also important blind spots in terms of the monitoring of environmental hazards by law enforcement agencies and how that information is shared among the relevant actors.

Highlights

  • Illicit drug markets are a source of myriad ramifications

  • For the analysis we present here, we relied on two main sources of data: 1) data from the Belgian Federal Police (DJSOC) on the number of dismantled dumping sites, drug production sites, and storage sites, relative to amphetamine, MDMA, and methamphetamine; 2) written-press articles from Flemish newspapers with a focus on synthetic drug production and dumping in Belgium

  • Insights into the presence of illicit laboratories and dumping sites of waste materials associated with synthetic drug production in Belgium

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Summary

Introduction

Illicit drug markets are a source of myriad ramifications. They can generate or increase violence and drugrelated crime, corruption, and political instability, and they can have detrimental effects on the environment (Babor et al 2010; EMCDDA & Europol 2019). Deforestation (including the clearance of protected areas and tropical forests), damage to soil and waterways as well as to local and endemic flora and fauna, and increased pressure on often fragile water resources are some of the key environmental harms documented in regions associated with the production of coca, Pardal et al: Synthetic Drug Production in Belgium – Environmental Harms as Collateral Damage?

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