Pubdate: Thu, 08 May 2014 Source: Nelson Mail, The (New Zealand) Copyright: 2014 Fairfax New Zealand Limited Contact: http://www.nelsonmail.co.nz/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1069 Page: 2 BIG MONEY IN LEGAL HIGHS SALES The legal-high industry made massive multimillion-dollar profits during the Government's brief fling with regulation. In a rare insight into the legal-high industry, the Ministry of Health estimates the industry was making a 1000 per cent profit on every packet of synthetic cannabis sold. Chemicals were imported in bulk from China, processed into synthetic cannabis for about $2 a packet and sold for $20. Since the Government set up the regulated market in July last year, it is estimated that 3.5 million packets of synthetic cannabis were sold in New Zealand. Ministry officials have said the sheer scale of the industry caught them by surprise. With estimated sales of about $140 million a year, it dwarfed the BZP party pill craze at its height a decade ago. As of a minute past midnight this morning, interim licences for all legal highs were revoked, making it illegal to possess, supply or manufacture the drugs. The amendment passed on Tuesday night marks a U-turn for Parliament, which voted only last year to set up a regulated market for the drugs, licensing the industry and giving health authorities the power to pull unsafe products. The U-turn was praised in many communities affected by synthetic cannabis, but others have condemned it as a kneejerk political reaction in an election year. Even the Ministry of Health has warned that banning legal highs outright will push the products underground into the unregulated black market. It has estimated between 150 and 200 people are now so addicted to synthetic cannabis that they would need medical help to withdraw. "People who use these products are expected to stockpile them for their own personal use and the black market is assumed to stockpile to supply future demand," ministry officials said. "Because these mechanisms will provide for the continued supply of these products, irrespective of legal status, use and associated harms amongst dedicated users is expected to continue." Kai Guo, who owns the Naenae T in Lower Hutt, said yesterday he had been selling about three times as much synthetic cannabis as usual, with some customers bulk-buying up to $100 worth at a time. He feared the ban would create a "tinnie house boom" as users embraced the traditional black market for marijuana to get their fix. Legal-high pioneer and manufacturer Matt Bowden will have to recall and destroy thousands of packets of synthetic cannabis during the next few weeks, all of which he claims are safe. He said he had already heard reports of criminals setting up low-grade "garage labs" for synthetic cannabis. "It's a bit of a kick in the guts to see the market handed to criminals with no code of practice or hygiene standards at all. It will be like buying from a meth lab instead of a pharmacy." Bowden said selling legal highs was not as profitable as it looked, with retailers, research and development, and safety testing taking a big chunk. "Maybe if you are buying from overseas and not doing any safety testing, it is [highly profitable]." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt