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Colombia cocaine production acreage at 'record level' | Colombia cocaine production acreage at 'record level' |
(about 3 hours later) | |
Colombian cocaine production hit record levels in 2017, according to newly released UN statistics. | Colombian cocaine production hit record levels in 2017, according to newly released UN statistics. |
The UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) says production rose about 31% year on year to some 1,400 tonnes, cultivated on 171,000 hectares. | |
The agency warned production could harm recent peace-building efforts. | The agency warned production could harm recent peace-building efforts. |
Colombia is the world's largest producer of cocaine, much of which ends up in the US, which is the world's largest consumer. | |
Gloria María Borrero Restrepo, Colombia's justice minister, reportedly called the data "really very worrying". | Gloria María Borrero Restrepo, Colombia's justice minister, reportedly called the data "really very worrying". |
How much is being produced? | |
According to the UNODC report, the coca production acreage in Colombia last year was the highest ever recorded level, increasing by 25,000 hectares from 2016. | According to the UNODC report, the coca production acreage in Colombia last year was the highest ever recorded level, increasing by 25,000 hectares from 2016. |
The total acreage under coca cultivation was an estimated 17% higher in 2017 than 2016. | |
The report said the potential production of cocaine had a value of $2.7bn (£2bn) in the local market. | |
The UN said the region bordering the Pacific ocean in Colombia was the most intensively cultivated. | |
On its own, the state of Narino on the frontier with Ecuador has more farmland dedicated to coca than the whole of Peru, which is another large producer. | |
Eighty per cent of the coca has been grown in the same area for the past 10 years, while crops produce 33% more coca leaf - the main cocaine ingredient - than they did in 2012. | Eighty per cent of the coca has been grown in the same area for the past 10 years, while crops produce 33% more coca leaf - the main cocaine ingredient - than they did in 2012. |
How is it being tackled? | |
The country has fought for years against cocaine production, with the US providing around $400m annually to assist in Colombia's war on drugs. | |
Last year, Colombia also signed a $300m agreement with the UN aimed at reducing the production of cocaine by compensating farmers who agree to switch from growing coca to safer crops. | |
In August, newly elected President Ivan Duque told reporters the government would create a new drug-fighting policy, saying the goal was to have "concrete results" in the next four years. | |
A scheme to use drones to spray coca crops with herbicide has, however, attracted criticism. | A scheme to use drones to spray coca crops with herbicide has, however, attracted criticism. |
Mr Duque's predecessor, Juan Manuel Santos, suspended aerial fumigation using the chemical glyphosate in 2015, following warnings by the World Health Organization (WHO) that the chemical could be linked to cancer. | Mr Duque's predecessor, Juan Manuel Santos, suspended aerial fumigation using the chemical glyphosate in 2015, following warnings by the World Health Organization (WHO) that the chemical could be linked to cancer. |
The country's cocaine trade is still flourishing despite the 2016 peace deal in Colombia, which ended five decades of armed conflict with major rebel group the Farc. | The country's cocaine trade is still flourishing despite the 2016 peace deal in Colombia, which ended five decades of armed conflict with major rebel group the Farc. |
Some blame the government for concentrating too hard on peace, while others said that by going clean the Farc rebels left a vacuum in the trade they once controlled. | Some blame the government for concentrating too hard on peace, while others said that by going clean the Farc rebels left a vacuum in the trade they once controlled. |
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