United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) has warned that the global illicit drug trade is undergoing a profound transformation, with criminal networks increasingly taking advantage of emerging technologies, geopolitical instability, and shifting consumer markets to expand their reach, introduce more dangerous synthetic substances, and penetrate regions previously thought to be less affected.
According to the UN agency’s World Drug Report 2026, organised criminal organisations are adapting more quickly than governments can keep up with the continuously changing drug scene.
The report revealed that drug traffickers are actively pursuing new consumer markets, especially in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East, experimenting with different trafficking methods, and constantly creating new synthetic narcotics to elude law enforcement.
The results coincide with the greatest level of drug usage in the world in ten years. UNODC estimates that 331 million individuals used illegal drugs in 2024, accounting for 6.2% of the global population between the ages of 15 and 64, up from 5.2% in 2014. The rise is a result of both rising demand and increased access to a variety of drugs in global marketplaces.
With almost 256 million users in 2024, cannabis is still by far the most widely used drug in the globe. Subsequently, 63 million individuals took opiates, 32 million used amphetamines, 25 million used cocaine, and 21 million used ecstasy.
Beyond the growing user base, however, the report draws attention to a far more concerning trend: the growing sophistication of organised crime organisations who are coming up with new ways to stay ahead of law enforcement.
An increasing amount of synthetic compounds created especially to evade national drug restrictions and evade detection by law enforcement are being produced by illicit laboratories. According to UNODC, authorities have found five times more drug kinds in seizures than they did before to 2000, indicating a significant rise in the variety of narcotics in circulation worldwide during the previous 20 years.
UNODC Executive Director Monica Juma warned that the rapid evolution of the illegal drug market is creating new public health threats while strengthening organised crime networks that destabilise societies and economies.
“We have seen an unprecedented spike in new types of drugs on the market, and worryingly, some are more potent or dangerous than before.
“And, we are already suffering the impact: millions of premature deaths and healthy years of life needlessly lost; drug trafficking networks that are distorting economies; the destruction of lives, communities and livelihoods; and the compounding of insecurity and violence.”
Monica Juma
She stressed that governments must respond with stronger international cooperation, intelligence sharing and sustained investment in prevention and treatment.
“The imperative to focus on stopping organized crime groups has never been greater. We must surge deterrence efforts, increase intelligence-sharing and coordinate joint operations, while investing more in prevention and treatment.”
Monica Juma
Moreover, methamphetamine production and trafficking, once concentrated largely in East and Southeast Asia, have steadily spread into parts of Africa. At the same time, cocaine traffickers are increasingly targeting African markets as organised crime groups seek new consumers beyond their traditional destinations in Europe and North America.
The report indicates that several African countries recorded some of the world’s fastest growth in cocaine seizures between 2020 and 2024, signalling increased trafficking activity even where overall seizure volumes remain comparatively low.
Cocaine and Methamphetamine Reach New Regions

One of the report’s most significant findings concerns the transformation of the global opioid market following Afghanistan’s 2022 ban on opium cultivation.
For decades, Afghanistan dominated global illicit opium production. However, the ban has dramatically reduced heroin supplies originating from the country, creating conditions that are encouraging traffickers to shift towards synthetic alternatives.
Although Myanmar increased opium production from approximately **420 tonnes in 2021 to more than 1,000 tonnes in 2025, UNODC stated this remains far below the more than 6,000 tonnes produced annually by Afghanistan before the ban.
Rather than accepting reduced profits, criminal organisations have increasingly embraced highly potent synthetic opioids such as fentanyls, nitazenes and orphines.
According to the report, this transition could permanently reshape global opioid markets, replacing traditional plant-based narcotics with laboratory-produced substances that are often considerably more potent and significantly more difficult for authorities to detect.
The methamphetamine market is also becoming increasingly global.
According to the UNODC, rising production capacity and the introduction of new trafficking routes have driven up demand in the Near and Middle East, Africa, and portions of Europe. Myanmar is still the world’s top producer, although suppliers from North America, West Africa, Southern Africa, and Southwest Asia are increasingly involved in international trafficking networks.
Methamphetamine originating in North America is now being trafficked across the Pacific Ocean to countries along the Western Pacific Rim, while disruptions in Syria’s former captagon market following the Assad government’s demise in late 2024 have contributed to an increase in methamphetamine use throughout the Middle Eastern region.
The cannabis market is likewise witnessing substantial changes. According to the report, shifting public opinions as a result of legalisation and decriminalisation policies implemented in various jurisdictions, notably in North America, have contributed to the continuous increase of cannabis usage.
Cannabis usage has grown by 40% over the last decade, with the incidence among those aged 15 to 64 rising from 3.8% in 2014 to 4.8% in 2024.
Cannabis trafficking has always happened mostly in regional markets due to the crop’s ability to be grown practically anywhere. However, the UNODC discovered that international traffic is fast developing, with North America becoming as a significant source of cannabis intercepted outside of the continent.
This report also highlights unprecedented levels of cocaine production, which has more than quadrupled over the last decade and is expected to approach 4,000 tonnes of pure cocaine by 2024. Organised criminal organisations continue to expand their supply into established markets in Western Europe, North America, and Oceania, as well as new markets in Africa and Asia.
Beyond the economic consequences of illegal drug trafficking, the UNODC cautions that extensive drug use contributes to violence, organised crime, family instability, and greater societal insecurity.
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