Pubdate: Tue, 10 Oct 2006 Source: Quad-City Times (IA) Copyright: 2006 Quad-City Times Contact: http://www.qctimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/857 Author: Charlotte Eby Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) ADDITIVE RENDERS ANHYDROUS AMMONIA USELESS TO METH COOKS DES MOINES -- Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack has a message for people who want to manufacture the illegal drug methamphetamine: Don't bother. Vilsack and other public officials unveiled a new additive to the fertilizer known as anhydrous ammonia that renders it useless to meth makers who might steal it from farms and use it to cook the illegal drug. "It is an important day for safer communities and safer children in our state," Vilsack said at a news conference held on the steps of the Capitol with a tank of anhydrous ammonia as a backdrop. Retailers expect the practice of injecting calcium nitrate into anhydrous ammonia tanks will gain wide acceptance. Vilsack said the discovery will reduce the theft of the fertilizer and cut the amount of meth produced in the state. Iowa State University researchers George Kraus and John Verkade, both chemistry professors, tried dozens of combinations before finding that calcium nitrate was effective. "We were investigating a whole raft of compounds, and finally we ended up taking what's called the 'Edisonian' approach: You try everything you can to make the light bulb light," Verkade said. Ag retailers who participate in the voluntary program will receive a supply of the calcium nitrate additive as well as "Stop Meth" signs they can place on their anhydrous tanks. Vilsack said the latest discovery, which will not harm farm equipment or the environment, will help keep Iowa at the forefront of dealing with the meth issue. The state already has put in place restrictions on the sale of pseudoephedrine, a common ingredient in cold medicine that is the key component in the manufacture of meth. That has reduced the number of illegal meth labs shut down by law enforcement in Iowa by a dramatic 77 percent. U.S. Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, along with other members of Iowa's congressional delegation, helped secure more than $1 million for research into the ammonia additive. Harkin said it provides a creative solution to the problem that is easier than putting locks on anhydrous ammonia tanks. "You can do one or the other, and I guess if you really want to be safe, you can do them both," he said. Despite those weapons against meth manufacture, the state has a long way to go in the fight against a drug that breaks up families, Harkin added. "We all know how bad it is, the enormous strain it is putting on our local law enforcement resources and putting them at great risk. So, we have to continue to find ways to stop the meth from coming into the state," he said. Close to 90 percent of the meth found in Iowa is brought in from out of state rather than manufactured here, said Marvin Van Haaftan, director of the Governor's Office of Drug Control Policy. But he said the restrictions on anhydrous ammonia and pseudoephedrine help ease concern among Iowans that amateur meth makers could cause an explosion in apartment buildings or expose children to the dangerous fumes. Instead of using anhydrous ammonia, meth makers could use red phosphorous, although it is a more complicated process and less common, Van Haaftan said. "Our cooks in Iowa love the anhydrous meth. It's quick and easy, and it's potent," he added. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman