The European Council has approved its first-ever drug framework aimed at reducing drug use and drug-related crimes across the European Union. This ambitious strategy responds to growing concerns over drug consumption and trafficking, with the European Union Drugs Agency reporting at least 7,600 annual overdose deaths. Synthetic drug trafficking has surged by over 1,000 percent in the past decade, prompting organized crime networks to adapt by rerouting cocaine shipments to secondary ports. The new framework, adopted by unanimous political consensus, mandates major EU maritime ports to form alliances and coordinate efforts. It also targets the financing of trafficking operations and seeks to curb synthetic drug production through legal bans on certain chemicals. On the health front, the strategy proposes implementing city-level tracking networks, distributing take-home overdose reversal medications, and funding integrated treatment models for vulnerable populations.