Europe: Dutch Marijuana Export Industry Generates $2.7 Billion a Year, Prohibition-Related Violence | Stop the Drug War (DRCNet)
Dutch marijuana growers are earning about $2.7 billion a year from exporting their crops, mostly to their European neighbors, Dutch police commissioner Max Daniel told the newspaper NRC Handelsblad last weekend. But the black market trade is also engendering violence, he said.Daniel estimated that more than 500 metric tons of marijuana grown in the Netherlands, or 80% of the total crop, is destined for export. He said the numbers are based on police figures. “In the Netherlands, we have 400,000 cannabis users,” Daniel said. “If that was it, we would have a much more manageable problem.”
Under Dutch law marijuana possession and production are criminal offenses, but in practice, police tolerate the sale of marijuana in coffee shops, the possession of small amounts, and the growing of up to four plants. Larger grows, including those that supply the coffee shops, are illegal.
But because marijuana production remains prohibited, Holland, like other countries, faces the problems associated with the black market, including prohibition-related crime and violence. Daniel put it starkly: “Today, cannabis is involved in nearly all major cases involving murder, weapons, and drugs.”
And the marijuana trade is seeping into the legitimate economy. Banks finance marijuana grows, companies fund university research in agricultural methods, and the Dutch exchequer benefits from the coffee house sales.
“In the production of cannabis,” said Daniel, “the criminal and non-criminal worlds have become increasingly intertwined. Many people have become rich by growing cannabis. You can become a millionaire within 10 years. Many of the proceeds are invested legally in real estate. But I don’t believe that someone who has had people killed 14 or 15 years ago can turn into a good citizen.”
A similar story can be written anywhere cannabis is prohibited, yet grown. Prohibition creates massive profits for those who will take the risk of incarceration. High profits plus no legal avenue to resolve disputes creates the use of violence to solve disputes. Violence engendered by prohibition is unfairly conflated in the public mind as engendered by the cannabis itself. A public scared by cannabis-related violence calls for a solution. The only solution available in prohibition is stricter prohibition and greater penalties, which creates massive profits for those who will take the risk of incarceration… and the circle is complete.
It is simple economics. If there is a demand, there will be a supply. You can declare the demand illegal, but that doesn’t stop the demand; it just tightens the supply.





















Marijuana is not cultivated but it is a native plant just grows like any other plants,weed or shrub.
Since we stast to understand the use of it, youths mainly do smoke and we have alot in our villages.
Right now Iam looking for a market where I can trade these herbal. If you have any idea please reply me on my email.
Thanks,
J.Kesi