Danish jewelry giant Pandora announced this
week that it will not use any newly mined silver or gold in its jewelry by 2025. The company says this shift will cut
carbon emissions by two-thirds for silver — the most used material
in Pandora jewelry — and by more than 99 percent for gold.
Pandora — the world’s largest jewelry brand — says that 71 percent of the silver
and gold in its jewelry already comes from recycled sources. Shifting completely
to recycled silver and gold will reduce CO2 emissions, water usage and other environmental impacts, because recycling of metals uses less resources than mining new metals. The carbon emissions from sourcing recycled silver are one-third compared to mined silver; while recycling of gold emits approximately 600 times less carbon than mining new gold, according to life cycle assessments.
“Silver and gold are beautiful jewelry materials that can be recycled forever without losing their quality — metals mined centuries ago are just as good as new,” said CEO Alexander Lacik. “For many years, Pandora has used recycled metals in our designs. Now we are ready to take the next step and stop using mined silver and gold altogether. We wish to help develop a more responsible way of crafting affordable luxury like our jewelry, and prevent that these fine metals end up in landfills. We want to do our part
to build a more circular economy.”
Pandora’s efforts join that of an industry that’s slowly mobilizing to
prioritize sustainable sourcing — in 2019, Tiffany & Co committed to 100
percent
traceability
for each of its newly sourced diamonds; and, along with Apple, partnered to
launch Salmon Gold™ — an innovative
approach to sourcing gold responsibly while restoring fish habitats. And actress
Nikki Reed’s jewelry company, BaYou with Love, made headlines in
2018
when it unveiled its “Circular Collection” of pieces made of recycled gold from
the motherboards of end-of-life Dell computers.
Speaking of which, recovering precious metals from used electronics — so-called
“urban mining” — not only keeps those metals in use much longer, it’s an
incredible cost-saving strategy: According to the United Nations’ 2018
Global E-waste Monitor report, it costs 13 times
more
to obtain metals such as gold and copper from ore than from urban mining. Plus,
a 2017 analysis of wastewater treatment plants in Switzerland found roughly
6,500 pounds of gold, palladium, platinum
and silver — waste from the country’s watch-making industry — are literally being
flushed down the drain each year. So, abundant “urban” sources already exist for
these precious metals, it’s just a matter of establishing sufficient
infrastructure for diverting them from landfills and sewers.
Pandora’s decision to use recycled precious metals follows its
announcement in
January of its goal to achieve carbon neutrality by 2025. The jeweler has also
joined the Science Based Targets
initiative, and says it will publish a
plan in 2021 to reduce emissions in its full value chain in line with the Paris
Agreement.
Read more
here
…
Get the latest insights, trends, and innovations to help position yourself at the forefront of sustainable business leadership—delivered straight to your inbox.
Sustainable Brands Staff
Published Jun 3, 2020 8am EDT / 5am PDT / 1pm BST / 2pm CEST