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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
2.08.2007 - 08:07am ET
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Leading Retailers Pledge Their Gold Jewelry Will Sparkle Responsibly
7 of top 10 U.S. Jewelry Retailers, including Wal-Mart and QVC, Support Cleaner Gold Mining; Target named a laggard
(CSRwire) WASHINGTON, DC.- February 8, 2007 – This Valentine’s season, 11 jewelry
retailers are announcing their support for the No Dirty Gold campaign’s
Golden Rules criteria for more socially and environmentally responsible
mining, bringing the total number of jewelry retailers supporting the
Golden Rules up to 19. The list includes 7 of the 10 largest U.S.
retailers of jewelry, and represents about 22 percent of the country’s
total jewelry market. The companies added to the list this year are: Fred
Meyer and Littman Jewelers, Ben Bridge Jeweler, Wal-Mart, QVC, Birks &
Mayors, Commemorative Brands (parent company of Balfour, ArtCarved, and
Keystone class rings brands), Brilliant Earth, Leber Jeweler,
TurningPoint, Boscov’s and Michaels Jewelers.
“It is important for us as retail jewelers to do all practically in our
power to adhere to the principles of the No Dirty Gold campaign. It is
the ‘right thing to do’ for our community, our customers, as well as
the world environment,” said Jonathan Bridge, co-CEO of Seattle-based
Ben Bridge Jeweler.
“By signing onto the Golden Rules, these jewelry retailers have
burnished their reputations as industry leaders. Customers in Paris and
mining-affected communities in Peru alike will take note of their support
for improved mining practices,” said Payal Sampat of environmental
organization EARTHWORKS and co-director of the No Dirty Gold campaign.
More than 55,000 consumers worldwide have signed a pledge calling on
jewelers and mining companies to provide an alternative to “dirty”
gold.
“The message from the jewelry industry is clear—there is an emerging
consensus that “dirty” gold will not be tolerated,” said Raymond C.
Offenheiser, president of Oxfam America, an international relief and
development organization and co-founder of the No Dirty Gold campaign.
The campaign also added the Target Corporation, the Minnesota-based
retailer, to its laggards list. Target has fallen behind these industry
leaders by not making the same formal commitments, despite the
campaign’s repeated efforts to win the company’s support. No Dirty
Gold activists across the country are calling Target stores to lobby the
company on its gold sourcing policy. Many are also hosting house parties
to send hand-made Valentines to Target CEO Robert Ulrich, urging him to
demonstrate the company’s commitment to communities and the environment
by signing on to the Golden Rules.
“Unfortunately, Target is still off the mark,” said Offenheiser. “We
urge Target to join industry leaders in formally committing to the human
rights and environmental criteria outlined in the Golden Rules.”
Last year, the following eight companies endorsed the Golden Rules on
Valentine’s Day, one of the biggest jewelry-buying holidays in the
United States. These companies are: Zale Corp., the Signet Group (the
parent firm of Sterling and Kay Jewelers), Tiffany & Co., Helzberg
Diamonds, Fortunoff, Cartier, Piaget, and Van Cleef & Arpels.
More than 80 percent of the gold in the U.S. is used to make jewelry. U.S.
retail jewelry sales were an estimated $55 billion in 2005, of which gold
jewelry accounted for nearly $18 billion, or one-third of the total. The
19 companies together represent about $12 billion in retail jewelry sales,
or 22 percent of total jewelry sales in the United States, which is second
only to India in annual gold consumption.
Austin, Texas-based Commemorative Brands, manufacturers of Balfour,
ArtCarved and Keystone class rings, is the first class rings company to
sign onto the Golden Rules.
“Our primary customers—college and high school students—make up a
generation firmly committed to supporting brands that take corporate
social responsibility seriously,” said Matt Gase, Commemorative
Brand’s General Manager. “By supporting the No Dirty Gold campaign’s
Golden Rules, we hope to reflect the values of the many students around the
country who have a deep commitment to human rights and the environment.”
Luxury jeweler Birks & Mayors became the first retailer based in Canada to
sign onto the Golden Rules, motivated in part by the need to protect the
ecological and cultural integrity of the Canadian Boreal Forest which is
at risk from mining.
The jewelry sector’s increased awareness of mining’s impacts has
spurred the creation of a multi-stakeholder group of retailers, mining
companies, and NGOs called the Initiative for Responsible Mining (IRMA).
IRMA will seek to establish best practice standards for mining operations,
as well as a system to independently verify compliance with those
standards.
The production of a single gold ring generates, on average, 20 tons of
waste. Gold mining has caused massive environmental destruction,
contaminated fisheries and fresh water, and displaced tens of thousands of
communities around the world. Approximately half the gold produced
worldwide between 1995 and 2015 has or will come from indigenous peoples'
lands. For more information, please visit www.nodirtygold.org.
For interviews with No Dirty Gold campaign and jewelry sector
spokespeople, or for more information, please contact: Harlin Savage,
Resource Media, (720) 564-0500, ext. 11, email: harlin@resource-media.org or
Helen DaSilva, Oxfam America, (617) 331-2984, email: hdasilva@oxfamamerica.org.
Note: Statements in this press release from retailers are provided for the
information of journalists and do not imply endorsement of the entire
release by the individuals quoted therein.
Top 10 U.S. Jewelry Retailers (by sales)*
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| Company | U.S. Jewelry Sales (in millions),
2005 | | Wal-Mart | $2700 | | Sterling | $2309 | | Zale
Corp. | $2178 | | QVC | $1400 | | Tiffany
&
Co. | $1220 | | JCPenney | $1200 | |
Sears Roebuck & Co | $1050 | | Finlay Fine Jewelry
| $990 | | Helzberg Diamonds
| $520 | | Fred Meyer Jewelers
| $455 |
Sterling figure does not include $845.5 million in UK sales, and
Zale Corp figure does not include $204.9 million in Canadian sales.
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