Ecstasy and agony: how drug waste is destroying Dutch nature.

By editorial Feb 13, 2024

Erik de Jonge was trampling through the woods in Noord-Brabant in March 2021 when he noticed an unusual smell. The police had called the forest ranger out after finding a cocaine laboratory in an outbuilding in Halsteren. The shed had been built illegally and encroached on the boundary of the Brabants Landschap estate, so the police needed to identify whose land it was on.

Over the 20 years that De Jonge has worked his beat, drugs labs have become as much a part of the local landscape as pine trees and winding streams. But it wasnโ€™t the lab itself that caught his attention. It wasnโ€™t even the acrid stench of the chemicals used to purify the drugs. It was the direction the smell was coming from.

โ€œI was walking back through the woods from the site to talk to the police when I noticed I could smell drug waste,โ€ he says. โ€œThe only thing was, the wind was blowing towards the lab. So it wasnโ€™t coming from there. I thought: thatโ€™s weird.โ€

De Jonge looked closely and saw a bundle of twigs on the ground. They came from hardwood trees, not the pine trees that stood in the forest. โ€œTheyโ€™d been sawn off, which meant someone had sawn up hardwood and laid it there. I kicked it with my boot and heard a hollow sound, so I moved the twigs and found a piece of carpet.โ€

Beneath the carpet was a wooden cover that had been nailed down. With the help of a police officer De Jonge wrenched open the cover to reveal a small hole covered by beams. โ€œAnd below that there was a filthy grey pit with a layer of white foam on top,โ€ he says. โ€œAnd a great whiff of chemicals.โ€

Eight metres deep

What De Jonge had stumbled across was the largest drugs dump ever found in the Netherlands. The chemicals had penetrated to a depth of eight metres, contaminating the groundwater and killing everything in the soil. It took eight months to measure the extent of the damage and another two years to dig out some 2,500 m3 of soil โ€“ enough to fill 37 shipping containers. De Jonge supervised the felling of 400 trees. In November the provincial government in Noord-Brabant began a clean-up operation in three stages, the total cost of which is expected to run to millions of euros.

Once the contaminated soil has been removed, a soil air extraction system will be used to remove as much of the drugs waste as possible from deep underground. Finally, the polluted groundwater will need to be pumped out of the ground and purified, a phase that is due to begin in May.

The chemicals were used to purify cocaine smuggled into the Netherlands by sea, typically from South America, after being mixed into products such as shampoo or toothpaste, or even ground into T-shirts. The drugs are extracted in laboratories using highly corrosive chemicals such as acetone, benzene, toluene and mineral oils, leaving behind pure cocaine that can be sold or exported. The waste products from the โ€œwashingโ€ process then have to be disposed of.

De Jonge estimates that the pit had been used to dispose of drugs waste for at least two years. โ€œWhen you pour in the waste it leaves a residue but the rest sinks into the ground. I could tell by the amount of residue that a huge amount must have been tipped into it. And we found two places where the soil was contaminated but no pit. So they were probably dumping barrels of waste in the woods at that spot for even longer, maybe three years.โ€

โ€œLike a bombโ€

The environmental cost is incalculable. โ€œI liken it to a bomb going off,โ€ says De Jonge. โ€œThe only thing is that you donโ€™t see it. Everything in the ground is dead. And everything that grows above ground depends on the soil. But because this is a pine forest where the tree roots are only 40 centimetres deep, it would have taken years before anyone noticed it.โ€

The Brabantse Wal, which includes Halsteren, is a Natura 2000 conservation area. It is one of the few habitats in the Netherlands for birds such as the European honey buzzard, nightjar, little grebe and black woodpecker. โ€œThere are only a handful of breeding sites for the honey buzzard in the Brabantse Wal and now we have to cross one of them off,โ€ De Jonge says. โ€œItโ€™s not there anymore.โ€

The forest will be replanted with new trees, but it will take decades for them to grow into a mature forest, and the rich variety of the soil can never be replicated. โ€œA landscape is shaped by geology and generations of people using the land,โ€ says Roijackers. โ€œAnd now we have a huge crater in the middle of it that weโ€™re having to dig out and refill. So there will be trees again, but the mineral trace elements and the seeds from all sorts of unique plants and species have gone, maybe for ever. What weโ€™ll end up with is a newbuild development, a kind of Vinex woodland.โ€

De Jonge points out that drug waste always leaves a footprint. Small dump sites that were cleaned up a decade ago are still visible when the vegetation is scanned with a multi-spectrum camera. โ€œThis will always be a contaminated site,โ€ he says. โ€œThe law sets limits on pollution, and weโ€™re trying to bring it back down to those limits. The environmental experts have said weโ€™ll never get it fully clean.โ€

Fifteen years ago De Jongeโ€™s colleagues in Noord-Brabant would come across one or two drugs dump sites a year; today he estimates it to be closer to 30. โ€œIn the last five years weโ€™ve seen them using other methods to dispose of the waste,โ€ he says. โ€œAnd where six barrels used to be a big load, if I find six barrels now that counts as a very small dump site.โ€

Fly-tipping

In the past large containers would be fly-tipped in rural lay-bys or woodlands, but criminals have expanded their repertoire to avoid detection. Last week two light container trucks loaded with jerrycans and boilers full of drug waste were found abandoned in a car park in Goirle, a satellite town of Tilburg.

Sometimes drugs containers are emptied directly into rivers or the sea. Since the discovery of the Halsteren pit, another four smaller sites have been discovered around Noord-Brabant. One one site on the Pater Taksweg in Rijsbergen, around 33,000 m3 of ground water was found to have been contaminated.

โ€œItโ€™s a cat and mouse game,โ€ says Roijackers. โ€œUnfortunately crime on this scale has become specialist work in all its aspects. Itโ€™s biochemical work and disposing of the raw materials is another branch of expertise. And theyโ€™re increasingly favouring this type of disposal because pouring it straight into the ground makes it harder to trace it back to the lab.โ€

The question of who pays for the clean-up is often a bone of contention. The decontamination of the site in Rijsbergen was stalled for four years after the landowner, Toon Francken, challenged the local councilโ€™s decision to hold him liable for the cost of the operation. Last June the Council of State ruled in favour of Franckenโ€™s family, a year after he died at the age of 91, meaning Zundert municipal council will have to foot the โ‚ฌ70,000 bill.

Since 2021 landowners have been able to reclaim the expense through a subsidy distributed by BIJ12, an inter-provincial environment agency, up to a maximum of โ‚ฌ200,000. Larger clean-ups, such as the pit in Halsteren, have to be funded by the provincial government. In theory it can try to recoup the money from the criminals, but in practice it can be difficult to establish where drug waste comes from and who is responsible for it.

Production chain

โ€œThe problem is that drugs dumping is treated as a separate crime in the Netherlands,โ€ says Toine Spapens, a professor of criminology at Tilburg University who specialises in subversive crime โ€“ the ways in which criminal gangs undermine the government.

โ€œYou can arrest someone whoโ€™s been paid โ‚ฌ1,000 to dump a batch of containers by the roadside, but you canโ€™t reclaim the costs of cleaning up the site from them. Weโ€™re looking at other methods, inspired a bit by Belgium, where waste dumping is seen as part of the production chain, so that you can hold the people who run the drugs labs responsible for the waste.โ€

The scale and sophistication of the illegal drug industry in the Netherlands far exceeds the authoritiesโ€™ ability to control it. In 2023 police discovered 124 drugs labs, 19 more than in 2022 and just below the record of 129 set in 2020, when illicit drug production was one of many cottage industries that thrived during lockdown. Australia and the US are the most popular destinations for synthetic drugs from Brabant; in 2022 police intercepted 27,000 parcels of ecstasy and MDMA that had been sent by post.

Freek Pecht, co-ordinator of the police synthetic drugs specialist unit for Zeeland and West-Brabant, says the Netherlands has become one of the biggest production centres of illicit drugs in Europe. Chemicals are imported across open borders from other Schengen countries, such as Poland, where licensing is less stringent, while the raw narcotics come in through the ports of Rotterdam and Antwerp. When laboratories are raided in Germany and Belgium, investigators often find Dutch nationals working in them, Pecht says.

Related Post

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *