Saskatoon StarPhoenix

StatCan to collect pot data from sewage

Waste analysis will gauge consumptio­n

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Levi Garber OTTAWA

• The federal government is taking a somewhat noxious approach to studying just how much pot Canadians are consuming: researchin­g our sewage.

Statistics Canada will spend up to $600,000 a year for a contractor to regularly test wastewater from 15 to 20 municipali­ties across the country for traces of THC, the active ingredient in marijuana, and other drugs.

The survey could be the best way to collect precise data on the amount of pot Canadians consume, according to Anthony Peluso, an assistant director at Statistics Canada.

“We want to have a good indication of actual consumptio­n numbers,” said Peluso. “Sometimes we do get quantities, but we’re not sure.”

Peluso said that by using the same methodolog­y from sewage analysis surveys in Europe that have proven accurate in the past, Statistics Canada believes it will be able to fill some of its informatio­n gap that way.

After cannabis is metabolize­d by the body, traces of THC are left behind in human waste. Samples of wastewater from sewage treatment plants can then be collected and tested for the substance.

The wastewater would be collected over the course of one week every month for at least one year with the possibilit­y of expanding to three if the results are useful, according to Statistics Canada’s contract proposal.

Six municipali­ties covering a combined population of nearly eight million people are already on board with the survey. But Statistics Canada would not say which municipali­ties have signed on.

Peluso indicated that the survey may also help the federal government track pot purchased on the black market even after the drug is legalized in July.

“It is possible that if we’re able to get the consumptio­n numbers and figure out what legal sales are, we might be able to get some estimate of illegal consumptio­n as well,” he said.

That’s because the wastewater tests will show how much marijuana is actually consumed, while legal sales data will only show how much pot is bought on the official market.

The technology used to track marijuana consumptio­n in wastewater can also be used to detect other drugs like cocaine and methamphet­amines.

Peluso said Statistics Canada is planning on taking advantage of that data as well.

DATTA Engineerin­g Inc., a civil engineerin­g and infrastruc­ture firm based in Ottawa, has already indicated interest in the contract.

Bidding for the contract closes Feb. 26.

WE MIGHT BE ABLE TO GET SOME ESTIMATE OF ILLEGAL CONSUMPTIO­N AS WELL.

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