Green your Jewellery Choice

green | August 15th, 2009 - 12:13 PM

o3qOne of Green Trash Can’s Spotters went to a wedding last Friday and the couple exchanged rings from greenKarat.

Throughout history, jewellery has held a special place in the fabric of human culture. Unfortunately, industrial methods of extracting jewellery’s precious metals and gems from the earth damage the land and endanger ecosystems. Further, industrial values frequently reduce the labor component of production to the level of a cog in a machine.

While gold is valuable enough to provide an incentive to recycle, significant amounts of gold sit idle, while mining continues at a pace of 2,500 tons a year. In fact, there is enough gold above ground (already mined) to satisfy all demands of the jewellery industry for the next 50 years. Much of it sits in bank vaults and in the form of old and unused jewellery.

greenKarat believes that consumers have the ability to demand the liberation of that idle gold through their purchasing decisions. Demand for recycled gold, in conjunction with campaigns to clamp down on ecologically and socially unacceptable mining, holds the potential to effect change. Because this methodology helps societal custom work in concert with principles of commerce, it can be embraced by consumers and producers alike, and therefore result in sustainable change.

Green Assay provides you with information regarding the ecological characteristics of the jewelry you are buying. Each component of the jewellery has its own history. Sometimes different parts of a piece are sourced or processed differently.Buying recycled gold is one of the most ecologically and socially responsible choices a consumer can make.

Buying recycled gold is one of the most ecologically and socially responsible choices a consumer can make. As in other recycling, changing consumer “waste” habits is important to solving the gold problem. Coaxing dormant gold out of hiding, we feel, is the best way to reduce demand for mining.

The wedding rings came in eco-friendly boxes made from seeds which could be planted.

Thanks to Clare for passing on the news of this eco-friendly product.

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