What You Need to Know About Canadian Diamonds
greenKarat says No! to Canadian diamonds for two reasons:
- They are not environmentally clean
- They are not conflict free
Surprised? That’s probably because a tremendous amount of money and effort is being pumped into delivering the opposite message. If you are contemplating buying a Canadian diamond, we urge you to visit MiningWatch Canada’s There Are No Clean Diamonds: What You Need to Know About Canadian Diamonds.
Just because there isn’t blood, doesn’t mean there aren’t tears.
You may also be interested in the following reprint from the Toronto Star:
Can we provide world with ‘clean’ diamonds?
Toronto Star - LARRY INNES
The romance and allure of diamonds has been tarnished by
the growing awareness of the bloodshed and conflicts associated
with their extraction in Congo, Sierra Leone and other parts
of Africa.
With the release of Hollywood's Blood Diamond the diamond
industry will be under the microscope. It might even take
a hit as shoppers look to buy a lasting expression of love,
while the industry scrambles for answers to tough questions
about the origin of these precious gems.
Some consumers and retailers are looking to Canada's boreal
region as the source of clean diamonds, as an easy way to
avoid the guilt about potentially buying blood diamonds from
Africa.
But is it that simple?
Currently there is a diamond rush in the boreal region.
In the past decade, several of the world's largest diamond
companies have opened mines in the Northwest Territories,
Nunavut and Ontario.
Canada is the third-largest diamond-producing nation in
the world with production reaching 12.6 million carats. And
it is only the beginning.
The global market for diamonds, worth billions of dollars
per year, is also being subsidized by Canadian taxpayers
through a federal "flow-through" tax credit program that
rewards exploration companies and their investors for their "risks."
This program is also enabled by an antiquated "free entry" tenure
system, which does not respect the rights and interest of
aboriginal communities or other land users, nor take conservation
into consideration.
There are serious threats and challenges posed by diamond
exploration and mining in Canada.
Hundreds of thousands of hectares of mineral claims are
being "staked" without consultation - let alone approved
by affected communities, many of whom are in land claims
negotiations and land use-planning exercises.
Beyond this level of disruption, there are the physical
effects caused by the activities: drilling, road building
and, eventually, mining with its legacy of open pits, tailings
ponds and the web of industrial infrastructure that comes
with these billion-dollar enterprises.
As a result, those involved in Canada's rush for diamonds
and other minerals are on a collision course with aboriginal
communities, environmentalists and many ordinary Canadians
who believe that the boreal region should not turn into a
free-for-all.
Unless things change, the resulting conflicts will be damaging
for everyone: affected communities, the industry, investors
and the retailers and consumers who want products they can
feel good about.
The fact is that today, no one can sell a diamond, gold,
or any gem and say it was mined responsibly.
In this respect, Canada is at a crossroads. Will it live
up to the challenge of an honourable, equitable, responsible
industry that shows how diamond mining can be done right?
Canada must lead the way, by protecting the boreal forest
and supporting the implementation of a verification system
that can truly ensure conflict-free diamonds.
There are solutions.
In Canada, governments, companies and retailers need to
embrace a vision of sustainability for the boreal forest
for the long term. They need to be able to assure and verify
for consumers that these diamonds don't come with their own
conflict.
The Canadian Boreal Initiative (CBI) supports an integrated
and balanced approach to protecting ecological and cultural
integrity, while promoting leading-edge development practices
that support responsible stewardship of natural resources.
The CBI has convened leaders from different industries,
aboriginal groups, and NGOs in the boreal forest, to work
on sustainable solutions through a joint commitment to the
Boreal Forest Conservation Framework.
One of the tools promoted by the CBI is land-use planning,
which is underway in some areas of the boreal, ensuring that
conservation and community values are not undermined by exploration.
Where agreements have been reached with communities around
environmental and economic issues such as with the Ekati
and Diavik diamond mines in the Northwest Territories or
with the Victor mine in Ontario, the companies must operate
to the highest standards, be transparent in their reporting
on activities and be willing to make community and ecological
health their highest priority. The profitability of these
mines allows no excuse for compromises.
The promise of a pure diamond needs to be supported by a
real commitment to protecting the sustainability of the land
and the people where it originated.
There is a cruel irony about the marketing of "Polar Bear
diamonds" at a time when the polar bear is being seriously
threatened by global warming and the incursion of development
into Canada's boreal region.
There is still time to make the boreal forest a diamond's
best friend.
Larry Innes is acting executive director of the Canadian
Boreal Initiative.
www.thestar.com
Reprinted with permission.
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