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Justice, Police Ministers asked for solutions to tackle near doubling of meth use in New Zealand over the past year

Author
Sophie Trigger,
Publish Date
Tue, 25 Mar 2025, 5:00am
A kilogram of methamphetamine was seized from a Kawakawa property. Photo / NZ Police
A kilogram of methamphetamine was seized from a Kawakawa property. Photo / NZ Police

Justice, Police Ministers asked for solutions to tackle near doubling of meth use in New Zealand over the past year

Author
Sophie Trigger,
Publish Date
Tue, 25 Mar 2025, 5:00am

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon鈥檚 asked his Justice and Police Ministers to look at what more can be done to tackle methamphetamine use in New Zealand, which has nearly doubled since 2023.

Police data shows an 鈥渦nprecedented 96 percent increase in meth consumption when compared to 2023, with consumption increasing across all sites.鈥

The Drugs in Wastewater 2024 Annual Overview showed the minimal annual consumption jumping from 732 kilograms to 1434, identifying a social harm cost of $1.5 billion dollars last year.

Luxon said he鈥檇 seen the recent figures and was 鈥渜uite concerned鈥.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a reason for why we鈥檝e gone so hard on gangs and on organised crime, which is driving a lot of the drug trade.鈥

鈥淏ut I鈥檝e actually asked Ministers ... Goldsmith and Mitchell to say what else can we be doing.

鈥淏ut it underscores exactly why we need to be tough on gangs who are actually driving a lot of that drug trade.鈥

But Labour leader Chris Hipkins says the Government has no real plan for tackling methamphetamine, and that seizing gang patches isn鈥檛 enough.

鈥淔orcing gangs underground clearly hasn鈥檛 been bad for business for them,鈥 he said.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e doing a booming trade in selling meth, they鈥檙e selling more meth than ever before, and the Government doesn鈥檛 seem to have a plan for tackling that.鈥

Hipkins adds that just asking Goldsmith and Mitchell to look at the issue isn鈥檛 casting the net wide enough.

鈥淗e also needs to bring in health, he needs to bring in the other agencies who are dealing with the consequences of it, because that鈥檚 ultimately where some of the solutions are going to lie.鈥

The police report says the spike in methamphetamine use has likely resulted from an increase in both supply and demand, along with a decrease in street level pricing

It notes locations with high methamphetamine use per capita were largely regional North Island towns also experiencing high rates of socioeconomic deprivation.

Labour police spokesperson Ginny Andersen says more meth on the streets is making it harder for an already stretched police service, in which back office cuts has resulted in more work for frontline cops.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e already stretched thin and there鈥檚 fewer police than when this Government took office. And on top of that they鈥檝e got a doubling of methamphetamine.鈥

Police Minister Mark Mitchell says illicit drug supply is a global problem, and police are working hard alongside other agencies and international partners to tackle the issue.

Mitchell says the Government鈥檚 given police additional powers and resources to disrupt and police organised crime groups who peddle drugs.

鈥淲e鈥檝e seen a number of successful drug seizure operations over the last year, including in Opotiki where there鈥檚 been a significant drop in meth use as a result.

鈥淟ast month Casey Costello appointed a Ministerial Advisory Group on transnational and serious organised crime, laser focused on disrupting illicit product and supply chains.

鈥淭here is a lot of work to do domestically and internationally to get on top of the problem, and this will continue to be a priority for this Government.鈥

The Drugs in Wastewater report also showed a 90 percent increase in cocaine consumption, compared to 2023 - with an increase from 113 kilgrams to 215 kilograms - noting the use is 鈥渓argely recreational.鈥

Sophie Trigger is 九一星空无限talk ZB鈥檚 Senior Political Reporter. She joined the New Zealand Herald in 2020, before moving to 九一星空无限talk ZB and the Press Gallery in 2022.

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