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One Gold Band. Twenty TONS of Waste.

We do love our luxuries and conveniences. Gold, silver, diamonds, and precious jewels make us feel sophisticated, elegant, and important. But how many of us are aware of the impact our adornments have on our planet and the people who live in the areas in which they are mined?

Until recently, I had no idea. One of the blogs that I follow by Barbara Crane Navarro has opened my eyes, and now I realize how much my jewelry has hurt people and our planet.

Most everyone owns at least one piece of gold jewelry, and yet, gold mining is one of the most destructive industries in the world. The process displaces communities, contaminates land and waterways with mercury and cyanide, and causes injuries to workers. The national organization, Earthworks, states on their website that the production of one gold wedding band generates 20 tons of waste from digging and processing the ore.

All mining is damaging, but gold mining is particularly so because it uses a process called heap leaching which includes dripping a cyanide solution through huge piles of ore. This solution strips away the gold for collection and leaves behind 99.99% of what’s mined in piles that are nearly 300 feet high of toxic waste. Surrounding ground water also is contaminated with the cyanide and other dangerous chemicals.

Tailings dams are constructed to retain mine waste. However, according to the UNEP (United Nations Environment Program) there have been more than 221 major tailings dam failures. These failures displace people and contaminate the waters causing death to humanity and wildlife. And shamefully, out of the more than 2,000 major mining companies in the world, only one, BHP Billiton, is taking steps to avoid catastrophic destruction.

Metal mining is destroying beautiful habitats in countries such as Miramar, Costa Rica, and the Dominican Republic as well as our own United States. In fact, Metal mining was the number one toxic polluter in the U.S. in 2010 releasing arsenic, mercury, and lead.

You can find out more about the destruction caused by mining from Earthworks and Barbara Crane Navarro’s blogs.

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ยฉ2023, Mary K. Doyle

Responses to “One Gold Band. Twenty TONS of Waste.”

  1. Rosaliene Bacchus

    Mary, thanks for bringing this issue to our attention.

    1. Mary K. Doyle

      Thank you, Rosaliene. All the best to you.

  2. marie

    thank you for sharing, sweetie. โ˜บ๏ธ
    you might want to take a look at the garment industry next…..

    1. Mary K. Doyle

      Really, Marie? I will have to do some research on that as I know nothing about the garment industry. There is a meteorologist, Ginger Zee, on one of the US main networks, ABC that only wears recycled clothing to avoid more waste. I’ll have to look further.

      1. marie

        it may surprise you to hear, mary, that the clothing industry accounts for @300 million tons of plastic pollution yearly, with textile microplastics accounting for 35% of the microplastics in the ocean.
        the textile industry itself produces 13 million tons of waste per year, while, in the united states alone, close to 34 billion pounds of clothing ends up in landfills yearly, close to 100 pounds per person per year.
        it’s a ridiculous amount of waste and pollution when you can only wear one outfit at a time, and there are only 365 days in a year…..
        thank you for bringing attention to human impact on our earth. โ˜บ๏ธ

  3. Cindy Georgakas

    This is so important and so disheartening Mary. Oh man that’s crazy and sheds light on such an important subject. All that glitters is not gold! ๐Ÿ’ž

    1. Mary K. Doyle

      Jewelry is not the same for me anymore, Cindy. Now I look at things we can randomly pick up off the ground and use without disturbing our planet.

      1. Cindy Georgakas

        I so agree but I’m not giving any of mine back.. lol. So wise of you! โฃ๏ธ

  4. One Gold Band. Twenty TONS of Waste. – EHS Safety News America

    […] One Gold Band. Twenty TONS of Waste. […]

    1. Mary K. Doyle

      Thank you for reposting, my friend.

  5. Jack Benton

    Reposted this on my blog! Good topic Mary.

  6. I Master Art ๐Ÿ”๐ŸŒฎ๐Ÿ•๐Ÿง๐Ÿฉ
    1. Mary K. Doyle

      You have a very nice blog. I’m happy to follow you.

  7. Barbara Crane Navarro – Rainforest Art Project

    Thank you so much, Mary, for your thoughtful and thorough blog on this vital issue! We consumers need to understand the consequences of our purchases and boycott ALL products from deforestation; gold, palm oil, gemstones, exotic wood, soy, beef, etc. !

    1. Mary K. Doyle

      Thank you for being such a powerful leader. Barbara.

      1. Barbara Crane Navarro – Rainforest Art Project

        ๐Ÿ’š๐ŸŒ๐Ÿ™๐Ÿ’š

  8. Barbara Crane Navarro – Rainforest Art Project

    Reblogged this on Barbara Crane Navarro.

    1. Mary K. Doyle

      Thank you for reposting, and mostly, thank you for opening our eyes, Barbara. You are incredible.

      1. Barbara Crane Navarro – Rainforest Art Project

        Thank you, Mary! I deeply appreciate your words!

  9. One Gold Band. Twenty TONS ofย Waste! | Barbara Crane Navarro

    […] by Mary K. Doyle and posted on Midwest Mary Thursday, May 11 […]

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