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Criminal networks are shifting from fentanyl imports to Canadian-made product

Organized crime groups have shifted their efforts away from importing the deadly synthetic opioid fentanyl and are now producing it primarily on Canadian soil.

A briefing note prepared for the deputy minister of Health Canada — obtained by CBC News through an access to information request — lays out the changes law enforcement agencies have observed in the illegal market for the drug.

«Superlab interdictions across B.C., Ontario and Alberta suggest that domestic supply is more than sufficient to supply the domestic market,» the note says.

The Public Health Agency of Canada estimates that roughly 44,600 Canadians died of toxic drug overdoses between 2016 and 2023. Four out of every five of the 8,000 overdose deaths Canada recorded in 2023 involved fentanyl.

«The fentanyl threat in Canada has definitely shifted from one of importation to one of domestic production,» RCMP Inspector James Cooke, a member of the police service's organized crime unit, told CBC News.

Cooke said that shift began roughly in 2019. In May of that year, the Chinese government listed fentanyl as a controlled substance and imposed more regulations on its production and export.

«It is believed this may have prompted the shift from fentanyl and fentanyl analogues being imported into Canada illegally toward domestic production in Canada,» the Health Canada briefing note reads.

The trend is reflected in drug seizure data collected by the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA). In 2018, the CBSA seized more than five kilograms of fentanyl on its way into Canada. Last year, the agency intercepted less than a kilogram. (According to Health Canada, it only takes a few grains of fentanyl to kill someone.)

Det. Matthew Dugdale of the Hamilton Police Service's drugs and

Read more on cbc.ca