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Urine survey reveals Europe’s favorite drugs

Coke, meth, ecstasy, amphetamines: each drug has a different ‘capital’
Europeans' taste for illicit drugs varies per region.
Key Takeaways
  • A large-scale survey of wastewater across Europe shows which illicit drugs are popular.
  • The use of four main drugs was up across the board last year, but regional variation persists.
  • Cocaine is popular in the west and south, meth in the east and north.

Some examples of MDMA, a.k.a. ecstasy, in pill form.

DM Trott / The Drug User’s Bible – CC BY-SA 4.0

How to trace illicit drug use

Europe’s drug capitals? Antwerp for cocaine use, Stockholm for amphetamines. Prague tops the list for crystal meth, Amsterdam for ecstasy. So says a study by the EU’s official drug monitory body, analysing sewage samples from 68 cities in 23 European countries. The standardised surveys of urban wastewater, conducted since 2011, are a good indicator of regional preferences in illicit drug use, and their evolution over time.

It’s not easy to establish the size of Europe’s appetite for illicit drugs. Most users would prefer not to discuss their habit, and seizures of drugs shipments provide only a very partial picture. Fortunately for the scientists, urine doesn’t lie.

Since its original use in the 1990s to monitor the environmental impact of liquid household waste, wastewater analysis has rapidly improved, and is now able to provide near real-time data on the quantity, the geography and the evolution over time of illicit drug use.

The most recent study, published earlier this month by the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA), took samples in March 2019 at treatment plants processing sewage for a total of 50 million Europeans, concentrated in the continent’s major urban centers.

The sewage was tested for traces of four illicit drugs: cocaine, MDMA (popularly known as ecstasy), amphetamines and methamphetamines (a.k.a. crystal meth). These leave clearly detectable biomarkers in sewage, unlike cannabis or heroin.

  • Compared to previous years, consumption was on the increase for each of the four drugs.
  • Residues for all four drugs were higher in larger cities – a reflection of the fact that this is where younger people tend to congregate.
  • Three out of four cities reported higher levels of amphetamine, cocaine and ecstasy use during the weekend, indicating recreational use.
  • Crystal meth use tended to stay even over the whole week, indicating more chronic, problematic use.

The Belgian port city of Antwerp tops the list for highest average cocaine use

Image: European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction

Cocaine: popular in west and south

The Belgian port city of Antwerp – and in particular the district of Antwerp-Zuid – topped the list of European cities with the highest average cocaine use, both on weekdays and at weekends.

The figures – expressing average mg/day of cocaine biomarker per 1,000 persons – show the Belgians out-consuming the runners-up in Amsterdam by a considerable margin. Also remarkable: four of Europe’s top 10 coke cities are Swiss; and London barely makes the list.

As recently as 2015, London was Europe’s cocaine capital, with a wastewater count of 909mg of benzoylecgonine (BE) per 1,000 people. BE is the compound produced by the body when it breaks down cocaine. Other research at that time showed 4% of Londoners between 15 and 34 years of age had taken cocaine in the preceding year.

But recent figures show the BE count in London’s sewage has been dropping for years now, from 895mg in 2016 to 619mg in 2019 – a reduction by nearly a third. Why is that? Wastewater research can’t tell you that. But the three most likely theories are:

  • The samples are non-representative anomalies.
  • The London market for cocaine is saturated.
  • After consistent rises in the previous years, the purity of the product has gone down.

The actual answer could be any combination of those three possibilities.

Seen across the whole of Europe, cocaine use is highest in western and southern European cities, particularly in Belgium, the Netherlands, the UK and Spain. Despite some increase, cocaine use remains low in eastern Europe.

Cocaine capitals of Europe mg
1 Antwerp-Zuid Belgium 1275.7
2 Amsterdam Netherlands 986.2
3 St Gallen Hofen Switzerland 909.8
4 Zürich Switzerland 890.9
5 Reykjavik Klettagardar Iceland 740.7
6 Basel Switzerland 716.6
7 Castellon Spain 714.4
8 Barcelona Spain 700.3
9 Geneva Switzerland 676.9
10 London UK 618.8

Ecstasy is now being used by a broader range of young people in mainstream nightlife settings.

Image: European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction

Ecstasy: from ‘niche’ to mainstream

MDMA, commonly known as ecstasy, is most popular in Belgium, the Netherlands and Germany. Until recently, overall MDMA use seemed to be declining from a peak in the early to mid-2000s; however, more recent data provides a mixed picture, with MDMA consumption falling in London, for example, but remaining high in some cities. Sharp increases were noted in particular for Antwerp, Amsterdam and Eindhoven.

In fact, the study reports an increase in MDMA use for more than half of the 42 cities with comparable data for 2018 and 2019 – leading the researchers to conclude that ecstasy no longer is a ‘niche’ drug, linked to the sub-culture of dance clubs. It’s now being used by a broader range of young people in mainstream nightlife settings, like bars and house parties.

Ecstasy capitals of Europe mg
1 Amsterdam Netherlands 287.4
2 Utrecht Netherlands 129.1
3 Eindhoven Netherlands 119.7
4 Antwerp-Zuid Belgium 119.2
5 Prague Czech Rep. 93.8
6 Barcelona Spain 54.8
7 Zürich Switzerland 53.7
8 London UK 50.4
9 Oslo Norway 45.4
10 Helsinki Finland 44.1

Prague is Europe’s meth central.

Image: European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction

Meth: breaking out of its Czech heartland

For years, methamphetamine was popular particularly in the Czech Republic. In recent years, the drug has made inroads in surrounding countries – Slovakia and eastern Germany – but also further afield, in various Nordic cities, in Cyprus and Spain.

Overall 21 of the 41 cities with data on meth use for both 2018 and 2019 showed an increase. Despite this, meth use remained negligible outside the established hotspots.

In 2015, Oslo and Dresden topped the meth league tables, in 2016, Slovakia’s capital Bratislava took the crown. In 2019, Prague was Europe’s meth capital.

Meth capitals of Europe mg
1 Prague Czech Rep. 726.9
2 Ostrava Czech Rep. 601.2
3 Chemnitz Germany 276
4 Erfurt Germany 251.8
5 Dresden Germany 171.1
6 Barcelona Spain 106.8
7 Oslo Norway 86.5
8 Zürich Switzerland 64.5
9 London UK 57.6
10 Limassol Cyprus 55.9

Germany, Belgium and Sweden occupy all but two spots in the amphetamine top 10.

Image: European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction

Amphetamines: popular in the north

Antwerp was Europe’s amphetamine capital back in 2016, but the city has to content itself with its top spot in the cocaine ranking, having gone down a few places in this league table. Sweden rules the roost, occupying first and second place; with Belgium and Germany occupying three spots each.

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No wonder then that the highest levels of amphetamine use were reported in northern European cities, with much lower levels in southern Europe.

Amphetamine capitals mg
1 Stockholm Sweden 446.9
2 Gävle Sweden 442.7
3 Saarbrücken Germany 341
4 Reykjavik Klettagardar Iceland 320.9
5 Antwerp-Zuid Belgium 302
6 Oostende Belgium 291.6
7 Boom Belgium 211.6
8 Helsinki Finland 201.6
9 Dortmund Germany 188.8
10 Dülmen Germany 169.6

    Wastewater analysis has its limits when trying to establish quantities or patterns of illicit drug use, but it offers support to other indicators of drug consumption, for instance the amounts of drugs seized by the authorities, and it confirms the picture of a remarkably divergent market across Europe.


    For more, go to EMCDDA‘s latest wastewater analysis cited here, which contains an interactive feature delving into the details of the survey.

    Strange Maps #1018

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