Sustainable jewellery options!
HLPF
theme is “Empowering people,
ensuring
inclusiveness and equality!”
CIBJO
Ethics Commission President discusses during
Small-island
development dialogue at United Nations
Properly
managed pearl farms offer real opportunities to individuals and communities
living on small islands in the South Pacific and Indian Oceans, both from an
economic perspective and in terms of protecting the marine environment, said
Tiffany Stevens, President of CIBJO’s Ethics Commission during the 2019 Global
Multi-Stakeholder SIDS Partnership Dialogue, which was held at the United
Nations in New York on July 10. Indeed, she added, for a cultured pearl farm to
become an economically sustainable asset, it is essential that it also be operated
in an environmentally sustainable manner.
Ms.
Stevens, who additionally is President and CEO of the Jewelers Vigilance
Committee, the New York-based organisation that provides legal advice,
education and self-regulation services to jewellers and other members of the
American jewellery industry, was speaking at the gathering on behalf of CIBJO
President Gaetano Cavalieri.
The
2019 Global Multi-Stakeholder SIDS Partnership Dialogue, which took place at
the United Nation in parallel with the UN High-Level Political Forum on
Sustainable Development (HLPF), focused on opportunities available to a group
of 57 small-island developing states in the Pacific and Indian Oceans and the
Caribbean, Mediterranean and South China Seas, examining how they may be
advanced through multi-stakeholder partnerships.
A Tool
Box which includes a set of policy tools for designing, monitoring and
reviewing SID partnerships was introduced at the event. The 2019 HLPF theme is
"Empowering people, ensuring inclusiveness and equality.”
“Properly
managed, a pearl farm can continue producing quality products indefinitely,
serving as a resource for national development through the taxes and royalties
it provides, and at the local level as a source of gainful employment and
community development, both directly and through the secondary economies its
nurtures,” Ms. Stevens stated.
What
has been learned over the years, she added, is that when it comes to cultured
pearls environmental, social and economic sustainability are inexorably linked.
“Over
the course of its lifespan, the oysters of the most commonly used species are
able to produce three cultured pearls,” she explained. “The quality of these
pearls will be a direct result of the conditions of the water in which the
oysters are kept, and the length of the gestation period, during which nacre
forms around the irritant nucleus that has been placed in the animal. If the
environment is pristine, and the pearl is provided adequate time to mature
under water, the chances of obtaining a higher-value product will increase
substantially.”
But,
she noted, the cost of maintaining an optimal pearl-farming environment can be
substantial, meaning that it is essential that the pearl farmers receive an
adequate share of the revenues they produce, in order to encourage them to
operate appropriately.
Ms.
Stevens pointed to a project that Dr. Cavalieri was involved in several years
ago, sponsored by the Government of French Polynesia, to reverse what had
become a downward spiral in the average quality of pearls being produced by the
country. What was discovered was that for farmers working under economic
distress there was little incentive to invest in producing a better product.
They attempted to generate more income by cutting corners in the management of
the marine environment, and by reducing the gestation period of the pearls.
This meant a continuing reduction in the quality of the product and the environment.
The
lessons learned from the Polynesian experience were applied when CIBJO was
invited to consult with the Government of Fiji and the country’s Fiji Pearl
Farmers’ Association in the creation of a national plan to increase the size of
the island’s pearl sector, while optimising the benefits provided to the
country and its people. “The plan that was drawn up called for a
community-based, pearl farming industry to enhance the effectiveness of
locally-managed marine areas, integrate coastal management and land and sea
management programmes, while also creating meaningful employment and
income-generating opportunities for indigenous communities,” Ms. Steven said.
Speaking
to the gathering, the Ambassador of Fiji also referred to CIBJO’s support of
sustainable pearl farming, insisting that all partnerships matter and no
small-island developing states should be left behind.
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