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Glastonbury Festival: Cocaine and ecstasy end up in river through urine and threaten… eels

British researchers are concerned about the rare species eel living on a river that flows into the site of the Glastonbury Music Festival in the south west of England. This is because the levels of cocaine and ecstasy detected in this river are high.

Researchers at Bangor University in Wales have taken samples from the Whitelake River, the site of the famous festival music, before, during and after the event, which in 2019 attracted about 200,000 people.

Viewers are accustomed to urinating in nature

Concentrations of MDMA (ecstasy) had quadrupled after the festival and those of cocaine had also increased significantly, as its spectators used to urinate in nature.

“This research shows that drugs are being released at levels high enough to disrupt the European eel’s life cycle, possibly undermining efforts to conserve this endangered species,” said Dr. Christian Dan, one of the researchers, as broadcast by the French Agency and rebroadcast by the Athenian News Agency.

Spectators and scenes at the Glastonbury Festival

Due to the new coronavirus pandemic, the Glastonbury Festival was canceled in 2020 and in 2021. This year it was replaced by a concert that was broadcast online.

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