The legality of cannabis in Antarctica is unknown.

High Times called Antarctica "the most weed-friendly place in the world" because it is "functionally a lawless land", yet acknowledged that visitors may be subject to the laws of their home country, in particular researchers on the continent.[1] Under the Antarctic Treaty, drug-related offenses are handled by the "national law of the expedition" but there are potential conflicts if more than one nation claims jurisdiction. Vice magazine published an analysis of international cannabis law in 2019, concluding that consumption of cannabis under the Treaty is legal for residents of Uruguay, Canada or another nation with adult-use legalization.[2]

Incidents

Seizures of packages bound for U.S. stations in 1981 by New Zealand authorities were said by Capt. Jare M. Pearigen, the Navy officer in charge of the stations, to have "gone a long way toward reducing the use of illicit drugs at American Antarctic stations", implying that at least some personnel had obtained and used cannabis there.[3]

A New Zealand newspaper reported that police had investigated cannabis grown at Amundsen–Scott South Pole Station – perhaps hidden in air ducts – in connection with the 2000 death of Rodney Marks.[4]

A California weekly newspaper reported in 2011 that a United States Marshal at McMurdo Station had ensured that cannabis is not grown at the station's greenhouse.[5]

References

  1. High Times 2018
  2. Vice 2019
  3. New York Times 1981
  4. New Zealand Herald
  5. East Bay Express 2011

Sources

  • Ali Wunderman (July 6, 2018), "Can you smoke weed in Antarctica?", High Times
  • Robert Reinhold (November 30, 1981). "Drugs are an issue at the south pole". The New York Times.
  • David Downs (April 25, 2011). "U.S. Marshals: No Dope Growing in Antarctica!". East Bay Express. Oakland, California.
  • David Hillier (April 17, 2019), "These are the Countries Most Likely to Legalize Weed Next", Vice, Antarctica has no government and no laws, so technically, as long as no one squabbles over their gear, you can toke away should you find yourself cruising the research stations of the icy province. However, scientists there are governed by the laws of their own land. So in principle, Canadians and Uruguayans can already toke on the South Pole, while Mexicans willing to deal with temperatures of -50°C should be able to roll up in front of the penguins before the end of the year.
  • David Fisher (March 14, 2009), "Death on the ice", The New Zealand Herald, Auckland
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