The Drug You’ve Never Heard of Wreaking Havoc Across Europe
Further Listening:
Fentanyl Is Bad. ‘Tranq’ Might Be Worse.
The Push to Test Drugs for Fentanyl
Why Some Opioid Victims Are Challenging Purdue’s Settlement
Sign up for WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Listen and follow along
Transcript
There's a drug that's fueling a growing crisis of overdose deaths, and it's not fentanyl.
A new substance is emerging in illicit drug markets.
It's the most deadly drug you've probably never heard of.
It's an opioid called nitazines.
A synthetic opioid so potent that this makes fentany look weak, and it's been killing hundreds of people.
Super strength synthetic opioid drugs linked to hundreds of deaths have been found in samples of fake medicines sold online.
The drug has led to deaths and overdoses all over the world, from West Africa to Australia, even some in the US.
But it's had the most impact in Europe.
Europe for a long time has kind of evaded the type of opioid crisis that has hit the US and that the US has been suffering under for three decades now.
That's our colleague Suna Rosmusson, who covers security and organized crime.
And once these nitrogen started hitting the streets of Europe and overdoses just shot up in those countries and those communities where they landed, I think a lot of people watching this stuff was concerned about whether this might be Europe's opioid moment.
Welcome to The Journal, our show about money, business, and power.
I'm Jessica Mendoza.
It's Tuesday, August 12th.
Coming up on the show, the drug you've never heard of that's wreaking havoc across Europe.
This episode is brought to you by Holiday Inn by IHG.
It's a new day for a new stay at Holiday Inn for business travelers.
With modern spaces for meeting and working, plus delicious dining dining from breakfast to happy hour and dinner, you have everything you need to get work done.
Give your everyday business travel an upgrade.
Book your next business trip at holidayin by IHG.
Visit holidayin.com to book your stay.
Are you a forward thinker?
Then you need an HR and finance platform that thinks like you do.
Workday is the AI platform that helps propel your organization, your workforce, and your industry into the future.
Workday, moving business forever forward.
Nitazines are a synthetic opioid like fentanyl.
But unlike fentanyl, nitazines have never been approved for medical use.
Nitazines were developed in the 1950s and they were never approved to market because they were found in trials to cause breathing difficulties.
And that's maybe the main difference between nitazines and fentanyl, at least to understand sort of
why nitazines are only, we only see see them now, is that fentanyl does have a medical usage.
You can get fentanyl on prescription in patches, for example.
As a synthetic opioid, nitazines are made in labs, today mostly labs in China.
But it's much more powerful than other opioids.
50 to 250 times more powerful than heroin and up to 15 times stronger than fentanyl.
Let's try and visualize the amount of these drugs that are required for an overdose in what we call an an opioid naive person.
That would be you and me, people I assume, don't have like a sort of regular opioid habit, an adult of normal size.
So around 30 milligrams of heroin would usually be a potentially lethal dose.
That amount of heroin takes up the size of the head of a matchstick.
For fentanyl, just two milligrams can cause an overdose.
For nitazines, it takes an even smaller amount.
The most common street nitazines in Europe at the the moment, you would only require one milligram, maybe only half a milligram to potentially overdose.
We're talking, you know, a few grains of table salt.
That's the amount.
So incredibly small, vanishingly small amounts.
It's not something that you can really identify just by sight.
Yeah, it's basically trace amounts.
In 2019, nitazines started showing up in drug seizures in Europe, and authorities took notice.
Since then, hundreds have died from fatal overdoses.
Countries where heroin already has a significant foothold have been particularly vulnerable, like Estonia, where nearly half of all drug-induced deaths since 2023 involved nitazines.
In the UK, during a period of over 18 months until January of this year, at least 400 people died.
That's a lot of people in a country the size of the UK.
And we should also say that those numbers are likely underestimates because testing for nitazines is so limited because people aren't really aware of them.
A lot of documentation of nitazines relies on self-reporting.
These numbers are likely underestimates.
Have you talked to anyone who knows someone who died from the effects of nitazines?
Yeah, I spoke to Anne Jacques, who is a mother who lives in Wales.
and who in the summer of 2023 was woken up when police knocked her door and told her that her 23-year-old son had died in his sleep in his student accommodation in London.
Her son, Alex Harpam, was a college student and rising opera singer.
Here he is in a video he posted to YouTube.
His mother said that he was healthy.
In an interview with the BBC, she said that he occasionally took Xanax to help him sleep.
He was always
having trouble sleeping, and this had got worse with his ADHD medication.
And
my hunch is
he probably bought them to calm himself down and try and get some sleep, I think.
But the police found out that the Xanax Harpham took had come from the black market.
Xanax is not that easy to get in the UK, so people will often buy them illicitly from drug dealers.
At first, authorities didn't think the black market Xanax was related to what happened.
They attributed Harpham's death to something called sudden adult death syndrome, a type of heart attack.
But Harpham's mom didn't buy that.
She's a medical professional herself and she consulted with friends and they recommended that she do some research into drug contaminants.
And then she came across nitazines and specifically asked the coroner to test the tablets in her son's room for nitazines.
And then they came back months after his death and confirmed that there had been nitazines in the Xanax pills.
So she essentially had to do her own research to to be able to find out that that was the actual...
Yeah, she told me she basically had to investigate her own son's death, yeah.
But this is something that really concerns health professionals here in the UK, is that one thing is that it needs the zines are in the heroin supply, because that's sort of the most, I guess, obvious place where it would be and it's maybe a bit more predictable.
But if it also, if it's also circulating and if it's also contaminating the supply of much more harmless medication, really, Valium and Xanax, that poses a whole other level of threat.
Most of the overdoses from nitazines happen to people unaware they were even taking the drug.
And that's because nitazines are cut into other drugs, most commonly heroin.
But it's also been found in popular party drugs like cocaine, ketamine, and ecstasy, or like in Harpam's case, Xanax.
If they're so potent, and so deadly, why would drug dealers cut nitazines into drugs in the first place?
It kind of depends on maybe what kind of drugs they're found in.
Like mostly nitazines are found in heroin.
And I think the reasoning there would be that you try to cut heroin with a contaminant that gives you know a similar effect to heroin, but it's much more cost-effective.
And if you get the dose right, you can increase your profits.
And maybe, I think sort of the theory that people go by now is drug suppliers are experimenting with nitazines to see how they can achieve an effect that mimics the drugs at a lower cost, maybe even sort of give people a stronger high at a lower cost.
That's at least the assessment from British law enforcement is that this is pure greed and the drug suppliers are trying to maximize profits.
This kind of opioid crisis hasn't ravaged Europe the way it has the US.
And there's a reason for that.
The US has suffered from this opioid epidemic since the 1990s, basically.
And there's two big waves of opioids that have hit the US.
The first was in the 1990s and it was fueled by aggressive marketing and private prescriptions of synthetic opioids.
And European medical practices are different.
So you can't get synthetic opioids prescribed in Europe in the same way that you can in the US.
Like Oxy, you wouldn't be able to get that prescribed there.
Yes, exactly.
LoxyContin was the big one in the US.
And then in the 2010s, the second wave hit the US, and that was fentanyl specifically.
And that was because Mexican cartels began funneling fentanyl into the US.
So those are the two big events.
Since Europe didn't have oxycontin or fentanyl circulating in its drug market, nitazines have filled a hole for synthetic opioids.
What have European governments said or done about nitazines?
The UK government has said that this is the most dangerous time ever to take drugs and that's partly because of nitazines.
I spoke to a director of a British drug treatment organization here in the UK and she said that nitsazines pose the biggest public health risk to British drug users since the AIDS pandemic in the 1980s.
So that's putting into perspective how serious people are taking this.
So we've talked about where nitazines are coming from.
We've talked about sort of the causes of why it's surging in Europe right now.
But how are nitazines getting into Europe?
Yes, nitazines, interestingly, nitazines are not that difficult to get a hold of, it appears, and they're not that difficult to source.
Just how easy it is to get nitazines.
That's next.
This episode is brought to you by KPMG.
Making an impact is how KPMG helps make the difference.
KPMG applies advanced tools and strategic thinking to convert data into actionable knowledge and deliver value by improving performance through transformation, modernizing processes with technology, harnessing the power of data, navigating complex MA transactions, and enhancing trust among stakeholders.
Go to kpmg.us slash advisory to learn more.
KPMG, make the difference.
For this story, our colleague Suna texted a number of Nitazine suppliers.
I asked him to read out one of those exchanges.
Hello, can you send Nitazines to Europe?
Hello, friend, yes.
How much do you need?
We used a bot to voice the supplier Suna was texting.
To the UK as well?
Can you clear customs?
Yes, we can ship to the UK.
We offer door-to-door delivery with double customs clearance and tax included.
Suna found the supplier online.
What's the max quantity you can send?
It depends on your needs.
We use this guy's packaging, which is very safe.
Large quantities can be shipped.
Kilos?
After Suna sent that last message, the person on the other end responded with a picture of two boxes filled with bags of cat food.
The presumption is that they were filled with nitazines.
Suna found this person on a site called TradeKey, an online marketplace based in Pakistan.
Usually, businesses use it to import or export things like furniture and appliances between different countries.
But Suna learned it was really easy to find nitazines on the site too.
I just typed into the search bar, typed in a couple different types of nitazines.
I typed in proto-nitazines and esoto-nitazines.
And then I got like the first time around, I got 88 different ads for this.
Wow.
And they come complete with phone numbers for WhatsApp or Signal, Telegram, sometimes even an email.
And then you just, I just started texting them and most people got back to me.
TradeKey said it has a zero tolerance policy toward the sale of opioids on its site and has added nitazines to its registry of banned products.
And since Suna's story was published, those ads he found have been removed.
In his conversation with a drug supplier, Suna tried to learn more about how they were justifying their business.
I'm a reporter with the Wall Street Journal, and I reached out to you because I'm writing a story about nitazines.
Would you mind if I asked you a few additional questions?
Okay.
Nitazines are a highly potent and dangerous type of opioid.
It's killed hundreds of people in Europe.
Do you have any reservations about selling these drugs given how dangerous they are?
We are a legitimate manufacturer and only work with licensed pharmaceutical companies.
The dangers you mentioned are the results of misuse and abuse by individuals not the product itself.
This question shouldn't be directed at me.
You should be asking how your own country is managing this issue.
Why can't your own country control the misuse of drugs?
That's just a little bit sort of boilerplate drug supplier.
Is that typically what they say?
I mean, I, Suna, I don't engage in text messages with drug suppliers very often, just got to be honest with you.
Yeah, I mean, this is shifting blame, right?
I mean, when I used to report from Afghanistan, I would sometimes go to poppy fields in Helmand and report on the poppy trade there.
And I've also spoken to Taliban fighters and later Taliban officials.
And they they would say sort of similar things, right?
They would say, well, if there wasn't a demand in Europe, there wouldn't be a market for us.
So, I mean, they're not wrong, right?
But also, it doesn't absolve them of responsibility, obviously.
And, I mean, the other thing about the exchange was that the person didn't sound like they were worried about getting caught.
It was very straightforward.
And like, here's how we're going to do it.
We offer door-to-door delivery is really interesting.
So I don't know.
What do you make of that?
Yeah, no, totally.
Like, it was very brazen and also like there's nothing preceding that.
Like they didn't ask who I was.
They didn't ask for reference from a trusted customer or anything like that.
Just straight in offering to send nitazines to Europe.
And I think that is kind of evidence of they work with impunity.
And
I just took that as a sign that they weren't really worried about law enforcement clamping down on them.
The people that Suna was texting had phone numbers from Hong Kong or mainland China.
China is where most ingredients for nitazines come from, just like fentanyl.
Recently, China has cracked down on fentanyl producers as part of trade negotiations with the U.S.
As a result, Suna says many drug suppliers in China could be turning to Europe to find a new market.
That's one going theory, at least.
We should caveat this by saying that this is still such a...
We're still in the beginning of this wave of nitazines hitting Europe, so law enforcement is still grappling with what's going on and the causes of it.
But yes, one theory is that because China has cracked down on precursors for fentanyl, suppliers might be pivoting into nitazines instead and then sending it into Europe.
So that is one ongoing theory.
And I think this speaks to the ability of drug suppliers to adapt to various restrictions that they might face in a changing drug market.
And while China has regulated certain kinds of nitazines, it hasn't been able to ban all of them.
And that's because if you just tweak the formula of a synthetic opioid a little bit, it kind of evades these controls
so what have you learned as you've reported about the rise of this new drug
as a european sitting in europe i think you know we for decades looked at the us
and saw how synthetic opioids ravaged america and
and europe never really had this kind of problem
and
i and the other people the other few people who follow Nitzazines are watching to see whether this is Europe's opioid moment.
I guess we'll see now how vulnerable Europe really is to a big opioid epidemic and how serious the influx of opioids will be.
Do you think they could proliferate more here in the US?
I don't think our American business should go into panic mode just yet.
Like the American market is already, to put it bluntly, like it's already saturated with fentanyl.
There has been rare good news on the fentanyl front in the US in recent months, like the number of overdose deaths has declined.
I think the main reason for that is better harm reduction, better access to treatment, better access to naloxone, this antidote that you can administer, better information.
But part of it could also be that China has sort of squeezed the supplies of precursors for fentanyl.
But drug traffickers and organized gangs, they are very good at adapting and nitrozines could be a way that they could adapt.
And American authorities are watching this to see if that's going to happen.
That's all for today, Tuesday, August 12th.
The journal is a co-production of Spotify and the Wall Street Journal.
Additional reporting in this episode by Ming Li.
Thanks for listening.
See you tomorrow.