Drug
trafficking
Introduction
Drug trafficking is a global illicit trade
involving the cultivation, manufacture, distribution and sale of substances
which are subject to drug prohibition laws. UNODC is continuously
monitoring and researching global illicit drug markets in order to gain a more
comprehensive understanding of their dynamics. Drug trafficking is a key part
of this research. Further information can be found in the yearly World Drug Report.
At current levels, world heroin consumption (340
tons) and seizures represent an annual flow of 430-450 tons of heroin into the
global heroin market. Of that total, opium from Myanmar and the Lao People's
Democratic Republic yields some 50 tons, while the rest, some 380 tons of
heroin and morphine, is produced exclusively from Afghan opium. While
approximately 5 tons are consumed and seized in Afghanistan, the remaining bulk
of 375 tons is trafficked worldwide via routes flowing into and through the
countries neighbouring Afghanistan.
The Balkan and northern routes are the main
heroin trafficking corridors linking Afghanistan to the huge markets of the
Russian Federation and Western Europe. The Balkan route traverses the Islamic
Republic of Iran (often via Pakistan), Turkey, Greece and Bulgaria across
South-East Europe to the Western European market, with an annual market value
of some $20 billion. The northern route runs mainly through Tajikistan and
Kyrgyzstan (or Uzbekistan or Turkmenistan) to Kazakhstan and the Russian
Federation. The size of that market is estimated to total $13 billion per year.
In 2008, global heroin seizures reached a record
level of 73.7 metric tons. Most of the heroin was seized in the Near and Middle
East and South-West Asia (39 per cent of the global total), South-East Europe
(24 per cent) and Western and Central Europe (10 per cent). The global increase
in heroin seizures over the period 2006-2008 was driven mainly by continued
burgeoning seizures in the Islamic Republic of Iran and Turkey. In 2008, those
two countries accounted for more than half of global heroin seizures and
registered, for the third consecutive year, the highest and second highest
seizures worldwide, respectively.
In 2007 and 2008, cocaine was used by some 16 to
17 million people worldwide, similar to the number of global opiate users.
North America accounted for more than 40 per cent of global cocaine consumption
(the total was estimated at around 470 tons), while the 27 European Union and
four European Free Trade Association countries accounted for more than a
quarter of total consumption. These two regions account for more than 80 per
cent of the total value of the global cocaine market, which was estimated at
$88 billion in 2008.
For the North American market, cocaine is
typically transported from Colombia to Mexico or Central America by sea and
then onwards by land to the United States and Canada. Cocaine is trafficked to
Europe mostly by sea, often in container shipments. Colombia remains the main
source of the cocaine found in Europe, but direct shipments from Peru and the
Plurinational State of Bolivia are far more common than in the United States
market.
Following a significant increase over the period
2002-2005, global cocaine seizure totals have recently followed a stable trend,
amounting to 712 tons in 2007 and 711 tons in 2008. Seizures continued to be
concentrated in the Americas and Europe. However, the transition from 2007 to
2008 brought about a geographical shift in seizures towards the source
countries for cocaine. Seizures in South America accounted for 59 per cent of
the global total for 2008, compared with 45 per cent in 2007.
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