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New super strain of coca plant stuns anti-drug official

rm1x

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New super strain of coca plant stuns anti-drug officials

JEREMY MCDERMOTT IN BOGOTÁ


DRUG traffickers have created a new strain of coca plant that yields up to four times more cocaine than existing plants and promises to revolutionise Colombia’s drugs industry.

The new variety of coca, the raw material for cocaine, was found in an anti-drug operation on the Caribbean coast, on the mountainsides of the Sierra Nevada, long known as a drug-growing region.

Samples of the plant were sent for laboratory analysis and experts then pronounced drugs traffickers had developed a new breed.

"This is a very tall plant," said Colonel Diego Leon Caicedo of the anti-narcotics police. "It has a lot more leaves and a lighter colour than other varieties."

A toxicologist, Camilo Uribe, who studied the coca, said: "The quality and percentage of hydrochloride from each leaf is much better, between 97 and 98 per cent. A normal plant does not get more than 25 per cent, meaning that more drugs and of a higher purity can be extracted."

Experts estimate that the drugs traffickers spent £60 million to develop the new plant, using strains from Peru and crossbreeding them with potent Colombian varieties, as well as engaging in genetic engineering.

The resulting plant has also been bred to resist the gliphosate chemicals developed in the US that are sprayed on drugs crops across Colombia.

While traditional coca plants are dark green and grow to some 5ft, the new strain grows to more than 12ft.

"What we found were not bushes but trees," Col Caicedo said.

Such an investment by drugs traffickers is small compared to the earnings from what is the most lucrative business on earth. Traffickers can produce a kilogram of cocaine for less than £1,500. That kilogram will sell in Miami for £14,000, in London for £34,000 and in Tokyo would bring £50,000.

The discovery threatens to undermine the successes the US-funded crop eradication programme has enjoyed.

Over the last two years, thanks to an unprecedented aerial eradication campaign, Colombian authorities have sprayed hundreds of thousands of hectares of drug crops, reducing narcotics cultivation by more than a third.

Two years ago Colombia produced an estimated 800 tonnes of cocaine a year. That figure is believed to have dropped below 600 tonnes.

On Monday, Mexican authorities signalled a major blow for the drugs-smuggling gangs when they announced the arrest of the man thought to be a leader of a crime organisation responsible for nearly half the cocaine and marijuana entering the United States.

The US had offered a $2 million (£1.1 million) reward for Gilberto Higuera Guerrero’s capture.

However, such success could be immediately wiped out if the potent new coca strain spreads across Colombia.

In the southern province of Putumayo, once the coca capital of Colombia, drug farmers have changed the way they sow crops in the face of repeated aerial fumigations.

"We know the spray planes need a target area of three hectares," said Sebastian Umaya, standing in the middle of a tiny field of coca. "Now we just have smaller fields, but with more intensive farming of the coca bushes."

Should the new strain be introduced, these smaller fields could yield up to four times more drugs and be immune to aerial eradication, meaning anti-narcotic police would have to eradicate them manually, an impossible task in the southern jungle provinces controlled by Marxist rebels.

The introduction of the new coca strain could undermine the efforts of the Oxford-educated president Alvaro Uribe to win the 40-year civil conflict.

By destroying drugs crops, the president was hoping to weaken the warring factions, both Marxist guerrillas and right-wing paramilitaries, who between them earn more than £500 million a year from drugs.

The US, the primary destination for Colombian drugs, finances the war effort with £400 million a year and has hailed reduction in drug crops as evidence that its war on drugs is finally bearing fruit.
 
Its amazing to see adaptation and evolution develop over the last three years of close observation of the drug war. Things slowly change and adapt to threat. Seems like the drug war is simply looking at the end result and trying to stop the drug war.

Its like trying to fix a leaking high pressure pipe with tape. Instead of fixing the root of the problem, which a broken pipe.

I really look forward to what they will think of next. Amazing on both sides of the story.

Though I also wonder just how destructive the gliphosates are to other species of plants. Perhaps ones that contain drugs that cure cancer! ;)
 
Genetic engineering is a wonderful thing isn't it.

Would it even need to be genetically altered Airwalk? I don't know whether it would work on coca plants, but I was thinking perhaps colchicine, the toxic mitosis interferer. A successful polyploid would be a giant, likely to produce more alkaloids, and be possibly even immune to glyphosates. Especially if this product was a pale (not much green) coloured plant.

Of course this super plant could have simply been a freak of nature; a 1 in 1,000,000 mutant seedling which was recognised as something very special. Careful breeding from then on could easily maximise it's potential.

All guessing, and with the money at their disposal, why couldn't these bosses have simply hired a couple of specialists to do the genetic fiddling?

For me, one important question arises from this.

If the spraying of Glyphosates becomes ineffective, will the US and the cooperative Columbian government turn to more sinister chemicals in an effort to eradicate coca crops?

Perhaps they already have? Here's something from a few years ago, originally from the Observer, and now hosted by cannabisnews.com
Use the link to the Full article


Excerpt:

How Global Battle Against Drugs Risks Backfiring


Posted by FoM on June 17, 2001 at 08:51:34 PT
By Hugh O'Shaughnessy in Bogota
Source: The Observer

Franci sits on the veranda and whimpers. The little girl is underweight. Her armpits are erupting in boils. Like most of her people, she has suffered from respiratory problems and stomach pains since the aircraft and the helicopter gunships came over at Christmas and again at New Year dropping toxic pesticides on their villages.

The tiny indigenous Kofan community of Santa Rosa de Guamuez in Colombia had it hard enough with pressures from settlers on their reservation, without Roundup Ultra containing Cosmoflux 411F, a weedkiller that is being sprayed on their villages in a concentration 100 times more powerful than is permitted in the United States.

Aurelio, a Kofan village elder, shows us around his village. The Kofan have been here 500 years. Now it looks as though their time is up. Pineapples are stunted and shrivelled. The once green banana plants are no more than blackened sticks. The remains of a few maize plants can be seen here and there, but the food crops have been devastated. There is hunger at Santa Rosa. He is close to despair.
Colombian babies and children are falling ill. Peasants, already miserably poor, are getting hungrier. Indigenous tribes are being torn apart and whole communities pushed into exile.

The reason is the US-sponsored Plan Colombia, conceived by President Bill Clinton and roundly embraced by President George W Bush, designed to eliminate all cocaine production in Colombia. A key element is the spraying from planes of a highly concentrated chemical toxin on the coca bushes, whose leaves provide the raw material for the drug.

The coca bushes have generally survived. In the front line of America's war on drugs it is humans and the environment that have become the victims.

Investigations by The Observer have revealed for the first time the extent of the damage which both the Colombian and the US governments have tried to keep secret since the scheme started in late December. Against a growing mass of evidence to the contrary, they claimed last month: 'The aerial spraying did not cause any injury or significant damage to the environment.' The reality is that the results on the ground are disastrous.

The small farmers in this rich tropical valley don't believe the official accounts as they wonder how they can replace their crops and the chickens and fish that have been poisoned in their farmyards and ponds.

Meanwhile coca bushes are sprouting anew. Wherever the farmers have been able they have cut off the poisoned leaves to prevent the toxins reaching the bushes' roots and the coca is reviving. On the hills of Putumayo their lime-green leaves are holding the promise of new thrice-yearly harvests from which the narcotic will be manufactured again: their flourishing presence mocks the politicians and soldiers in Washington and Bogota.....



:(
 
Here's a long but rather amazing story told by a guy who sets out to prove whether or not the new strain is a result of genetic engineering.

EXCERPT:

...In my hotel room, I put the swizzle stick-sized test strip into the tube filled with mashed Boliviana negra. The green water snakes up the strip. If the midsection turns red, I'll know that the drug lords have genetically engineered the plant and beaten the US at its own game. If it doesn't, it'll mean that Colombia's farmers have outwitted 21st-century technology with an agricultural technique that's been around for 10,000 years....

From: WIRED.COM- The Mystery of the Coca Plant That Wouldn't Die by Joshua Davis


I won't spoil the ending for you, but if you're interested in the topic, it's well worth the read
 
The development of "super strains" of MJ plants has been going on for ages now, surely this isnt a new thing with coca plants?
 
This is a bit off topic, but I thought I'd ask it here, mods delete it if you wish.

Why don't you ever hear of cocaine grown over here in homes with hydroponics systems? Is there a reason why it wouldn't work? Might be a dumb question but I've always wondered.

If something like this got over here you'd think with it being so much stronger it would be afordable for people to grow it and make it themselves?
 
^^^^
Because you need an absolute shitload of coca leaves to produce a saleable mass of cocaine. Tonnes.
 
These excerpts from the link below describe the usual percentages found in the coca species (not including the newer negra strain) cultivated at the time in SA

(-)-Cocaine (cocaine) is a naturally occurring alkaloid found in certain varieties of plants of the genus Erythroxylum. There are over 200 distinct species of Erythroxylum, of which only two, Erythroxylum coca and Erythroxylum novogranatense, contain significant amounts of cocaine....

...Taxonomic studies have shown that ECVI, ENVN, and ENVT each originally derived from ECVC7. ECVI is primarily seen in the lowlands of the western Amazonian basin55,58. It has a much lower cocaine content (average ca. 0.25%56) than ECVC and until recently was primarily cultivated only for chewing by local natives; however, rapidly increasing cultivation has signaled a recent switch into illicit cocaine production54. It has a very low percentage of the cinnamoylcocaines relative to cocaine (approximately 2%56) and probably a correspondingly negligible percentage of the truxillines41. ENVN is primarily seen in Colombia, and is much more tolerant of diverse ecological conditions versus the other cultivars54. Its cocaine content is comparable to ECVC (average ca. 0.8%56);

From Illicit Production of Cocaine by Casale JF, Klein RFX, Forensic Science Review 5, 95-107 (1993)
 
Fertilizer May Be Root of Big Colombia Coca Plants

Reuters

Dec. 7, 2004 - Giant coca plants said to resist herbicides and yield eight times more cocaine may be due to extra fertilizer, not a drug cartel's genetic modification program, a scientist said on Tuesday.

A Colombian police intelligence dossier quoted in the Financial Times said smugglers apparently received help from foreign scientists to develop a herbicide-resistant tree that yields eight times more cocaine than normal shrubs.

But a toxicologist who studied the plants for the police said he knew of no evidence that showed whether the plants were genetically modified or merely grew big because they received an unusually large amount of fertilizer.

"Up to now there is no scientific evidence, at least in our country, which shows this is the consequence of genetic manipulation," said toxicologist Camilo Uribe. "They could simply be the result of an excess of fertilizer," he said.

A few isolated giant plants had been found in areas including Colombia's Sierra Nevada and Macarena mountains, he said.

The United States has provided more than $3 billion of mainly military aid to back a crop-spraying program that the Colombian government says has cut the country's coca-growing area by almost two-thirds.

Washington dismissed media reports of genetically modified coca in August.

"We regularly hear rumors that narcotraffickers are working to create a transgenic form of coca, but there is no scientific proof that they have undertaken such research," Phyllis Powers, Director of the Narcotics Affairs Section of the U.S. Embassy in Bogota, said at the time.
 
Makes sense.

A local company produces bacteria for specific uses, particularly for plant or plant group fertilizer development. From the incredible selection the company offers, a friend developed a variety of organic based fertilizers for different garden vegetables.

Announcing the result of lab analysis, his words were, " I think I've cracked the Findhorn secret". The flourishing "laboratory" garden is located next to his house on a rock plateau with ~2-3 inches of fertilizer enriched topsoil.

Not only do these natural fertilizers produce garden plants which dwarf hydroponically grown controls, but the mineral content of the vegies is also off the scale. He reports that due to their vitality, most plants growing in these mediums are pretty much bug resistant.

Now if an ex serviceman with no tertiary education can do that......
 
i watched a program on National Geographic a while ago and they showed the super strain and all that.
they proved there was no genetic manipulation but rather a natural evolution of the coca strain resistant to herbicides.
they even showed places affected.

all they did was spread shootings around.

looks like America's war on drugs is being challeneged by mother nature. :)
 
I suspect the some organsations have been pushing cocaine availability down recently. Its much more common at the moment and high quality product is around.
An accosiate of mine make freebase using the ammonia/ether router (removes *many* cuts) and got an 75% return. In the past this would have been unheardoff and rivals quality in coke flooded areas......

edit: removed issue relating to other thread
 
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