Krykant grew up near
Falkirk in
Maddiston and has described his childhood as marked by significant trauma, which shaped his early life . He began to use drugs at a young age and later began injecting heroin aged 17 . He experienced homelessness and mental health crises that led to hospitalisation. Over time, Krykant made major changes in his life, building stability and a family, working successfully in sales for more than a decade in England and Scotland , and later as a HIV outreach worker in Glasgow responding to the HIV outbreak in the city. He went on to become a prominent harm reduction advocate in the UK and Internationally . He came to public attention in 2019—while Scotland was "grappling with the highest drug-related death rate in Europe". He had not taken drugs for 11 years. A stay-at-home father raising his children for many years, when he returned to work, he got a job in a recovery community setting up cafes and running activities and events. In 2020, he raised over £2000 through a fund-raising appeal and with family funds and converted first a minibus, then a former ambulance, to act as an unofficial safe consumption facility in which heroin users could inject themselves. The aim was to provide "clean water, needles and swabs, as well as supplies of
naloxone, the potentially life-saving drug that reverses the effects of opioid overdose".; the
UK government had refused to sanction the facility. By providing sterile facilities, he sought to eliminate bloodborne infections like HIV and avoid deaths from overdoses. A 2022 scientific study by academics from four institutions found that he "oversaw nearly 900 injections, successfully intervening in all nine overdoses that occurred". Krykant was arrested in 2020; the charges against him were later dropped. and
Queen Elizabeth II. He also stood as an independent candidate for the
Scottish Parliament in the
Falkirk East constituency that year, polling 971 votes (2.5%), coming fifth. His campaign was filmed by
The Guardian. In 2023, Scotland's Lord Advocate intervened to say that prosecutions for possessions of drugs in drug consumption rooms were not in the public interest. This led to the creation of the
Thistle in Glasgow's East End, the only drug consumption room in the UK, which opened in 2025.. Peter's role in the opening of this first, sanctioned
drug consumption room was recognised in an
early day motion which stated "That this house...recognises that his pioneering, unofficial, drug consumption van paved the way for the establishment of Britain's first official Safer Drug Consumption Facility at The Thistle in Glasgow...". ==Death and legacy==