Pubdate: Wed, 25 Apr 2007
Source: Washington Post (DC)
Page: A 17
Copyright: 2007 The Washington Post Company
Contact:  http://www.washingtonpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491
Author: Antonio Maria Costa

AN OPIUM MARKET MYSTERY

Something strange is going on in the global opium market, and it 
could spell trouble.

Opium is a commodity -- an illegal commodity, but it should still be 
subject to the normal rules of supply and demand.

Annual demand for opium is approximately 4,500 tons. Last year a 
record 6,100 tons were produced in Afghanistan alone. That country's 
production is 30 percent more than total world demand. Heroin prices 
should, in theory, be plummeting. But they are not. So what is going on?

Does opium defy the laws of economics? Historically, no. In 2001, 
prices surged tenfold from 2000, to a record high, after the Taliban 
all but eliminated opium poppy cultivation across the Afghan 
territory under its control. So why, with last year's bumper crop, is 
the opposite not occurring? Early estimates suggest that opium 
cultivation is likely to increase again this year. That should be an 
added incentive to sell.

Yet prices seem to be resilient. The (unweighted) national average 
price of dry opium at the farm gate in Afghanistan is dropping, but 
not significantly -- it was $125 per kilo in December 2006 compared 
with $150 per kilo a year earlier. Prices differ across the country, 
not surprisingly, since Afghanistan is not a unified territory or 
market, even for opium. But overall, the drop in prices is modest 
when compared with the massive increase in opium production, 50 
percent, in 2006.

Heroin prices on the streets of Western Europe are also relatively 
steady, although the drug's purity is going up -- a telltale sign of 
greater availability.

Are farmers stockpiling the drug? Unlikely. Opium, unlike cocaine, 
has a long shelf life and can be stored as a form of saving, a source 
of liquidity and as collateral for credit. But why would poor farmers 
sit on more than $1 billion worth of stock when they are struggling 
to make ends meet and common sense suggests that prices could easily fall?

An alternative hypothesis is that new heroin markets may be emerging 
somewhere we do not yet know about, perhaps in Asia. But if new 
markets were absorbing a 1,500-ton surplus, we would expect an 
increase in seizures of the drug and overdoses in these countries. 
That hasn't been happening.

So where is it? I fear there may be a more sinister explanation for 
why the bottom has not fallen out of the opium market: Major 
traffickers are withholding significant amounts.

Drug traffickers have a symbiotic relationship with insurgents and 
terrorist groups such as the Taliban and al-Qaeda. Instability makes 
opium cultivation possible; opium buys protection and pays for 
weapons and foot soldiers, and these in turn create an environment in 
which drug lords, insurgents and terrorists can operate with impunity.

Opium is the glue that holds this murky relationship together. If 
profits fall, these sinister forces have the most to lose. I suspect 
that the big traffickers are hoarding surplus opium as a hedge 
against future price shocks and as a source of funding for future 
terrorist attacks, in Afghanistan or elsewhere.

What can be done? Since NATO forces are wary of making enemies out of 
opium farmers by being associated with eradication, and since the 
Afghan government is opposed to spraying poppy fields, rounding up 
the major traffickers may be the best available option for disrupting 
Afghanistan's lucrative opium market.

Another step in the right direction would be to draw up a list of 
most-wanted traffickers involved in the Afghan drug trade. These 
criminals would be subject to international arrest warrants, asset 
freezes, travel bans and, where appropriate, extradition to face justice.

More could also be done to find and destroy opium storage facilities 
and heroin labs. This is by no means easy, but interdiction at the 
source is always more effective than trying to catch drug shipments 
dispersed into smaller units and smuggled across mountain passes and deserts.

Afghanistan's neighbors are either accomplices or victims in the 
opium trade, so they need to be part of the solution. They could, for 
example, improve intelligence-sharing and border security to ensure 
that more opium is seized. At the moment, less than a quarter of the 
world's opium is intercepted, compared with around half of global 
cocaine output.

But even if the surplus is tracked down and destroyed, and even if 
law enforcement efforts improve, interdiction alone will not solve 
Afghanistan's opium problem. More needs to be done to wean farmers 
off illicit crops, especially by giving them sustainable alternative 
sources of income.

Most important, the consuming countries need to get serious about 
curbing drug addiction. If there was less demand for heroin, the 
bottom really would fall out of the opium market.

The author is executive director of the United Nations Office on 
Drugs and Crime.