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Wastewater testing: Our biggest boozing regions revealed

Author
Jamie Morton,
Publish Date
Tue, 19 Mar 2024, 7:06am
The new study is the first time we've measured alcohol use with wastewater testing nationwide, a technique that has yielded insights about Covid-19 and cocaine use. Photo / 123RF
The new study is the first time we've measured alcohol use with wastewater testing nationwide, a technique that has yielded insights about Covid-19 and cocaine use. Photo / 123RF

Wastewater testing: Our biggest boozing regions revealed

Author
Jamie Morton,
Publish Date
Tue, 19 Mar 2024, 7:06am

A first-of-its-kind study has revealed small-town New Zealanders are bigger boozers than city dwellers.

The听听used wastewater testing to measure alcohol use around the country, a technique that has previously yielded rich insights about听Covid-19听and听cocaine use.

The results suggested Kiwis over 15 drank an average 12.2ml of ethanol each day 鈥 around one standard drink 鈥 and about 5.5 litres per year.

Contrary to notion New Zealand is a nation of binge-drinkers, that rate was below the global average - and behind comparable countries like Canada (29.2ml per person, per day) and Australia (17.6ml).

Rather, Kiwis鈥 drinking rates compared most closely with Italy鈥檚 (12.6ml).

When the team looked at regional differences, they found South Island locations generally had a larger rate of per-person daily consumption.

Westport, Queenstown and Dunedin鈥檚 respective annual mean figures of 16.6ml, 15.7ml and 13.5ml compared with the 13.5ml and 14.7ml recorded in Palmerston North and Wairoa.

There was a much more noticeable contrast between small towns and big cities: South Auckland and West Auckland, for instance, had annual mean results of 8.2ml and 8.4ml.

South Auckland鈥檚 results, particularly, challenged what study author Miriama Wilson called an 鈥渦nfair and prejudicial stereotype鈥.

鈥淲e hope that New Zealanders can overcome the stereotype that M膩ori and Pasifika are big drinkers.鈥

Elsewhere, the team found big drinking spikes coincided with sports matches and public holidays; the highest consumption recorded in Queenstown was on the day 鈥淭he Stallions鈥 male strip revue gave a one-night-only performance.

Study author Dr Lisa Pilkington of the University of Auckland said, 鈥淭his method can give insights that wouldn鈥檛 otherwise be available. It鈥檚 also much cheaper than traditional data collection techniques, especially considering the breadth of data that is able to be measured.鈥

The sampling, carried out with ESR in 2021, covered four major Auckland catchment areas, along with Palmerston North, Wairoa, Westport, Christchurch, Dunedin and Queenstown 鈥 or roughly 40 per cent of the population.

Other countries including Australia nationally monitor alcohol levels in wastewater.

NZ Drug Foundation deputy executive director Ben Birks Ang said New Zealand had little information when it came to alcohol, 鈥渁nd extremely limited data on other drugs鈥.

Measuring harm caused by drinking is a further challenge.

鈥淐onsumption indicators may indicate a drop,鈥 Alcohol Healthwatch鈥檚 Andrew Galloway said, 鈥渂ut it is the heavy drinking of the few that profit the industry along with the most harm to others - reinforcing the fact that alcohol remains New Zealand鈥檚 most harmful drug鈥.

Jamie Morton is a specialist in science and environmental reporting. He joined the听Herald听in 2011 and writes about everything from conservation and climate change to natural hazards and new technology.

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