Ingle & Rhode
Ingle & Rhode is a company based in London, England, that specializes in the design, manufacture and sale of jewellery whose components can be traced to sources certified free of the taint of being produced in substandard working conditions or in a war zone.
Origin
The firm was begun in 2007 after television documentary producer David Rhode had difficulty finding an engagement ring with a diamond that was "conflict-free" and a band whose gold component was procured with an eye to its environmental and ethical effects.[1]
"His response was extreme, but timely," wrote reporter Josh Sims in The Independent: "He and "a university friend and former management consultant, Tim Ingle, have launched Ingle & Rhode, the United Kingdom's first "fine jewellery business" to "stress its ethical credentials—as all the materials they use can be traced back along the supply chain" to the source.[1]
Rhode said that "there's no reason why ethical considerations shouldn't apply to jewellery," adding that "The last thing most people would want . . . to think that someone or somewhere was being horribly exploited in the making of it." He said setting up Ingle & Rhode was difficult because tracing the origin of gold is "anything but transparent."[1][2] Ingle & Rhode reviews the inspiration behind their jewelry and provides insight into the stories behind their work.
Environment
Florence Massey wrote for Vogue magazine in 2009 that:
The successful film Blood Diamond highlighted the corruption and exploitation that can be involved in the diamond trade—the reason it is so important for jewellers to make sure that their diamonds are fairly traded and let the public know that they are taking the necessary steps to deliver ethically sound pieces. One jeweller doing just that is Ingle and Rhode in Mayfair, London.[3]
In 2007, Ingle and Rhode was buying its gold from EcoAndina, based in Argentina, which nonprofit organisation had policies "to sustain village economies, introduce energy, irrigation and solar power systems, and to gather the gold the traditional way, by panning, the Independent said. "That cuts out the use of toxic substances."[1]
In 2010 the Financial Times noted that the government of Zimbabwe had begun auctioning diamonds from "a notorious field where serious human rights abuses, including the use of child labour, have allegedly claimed hundreds of lives." The Ingle & Rhode firm was quoted by FT reporter Tony Hawkins in Harare as saying that "allowing Zimbabwe to continue exporting diamonds made a mockery" of the Kimberley Process Certification Scheme, established in 2003 to prvent "conflict diamonds" from entering the world market.[4]
In November that same year the company signed a pledge not to buy gold from a mine proposed by Anglo American plc, which Environment News Service said "threatens the world's most important fishing grounds for wild sockeye salmon in Bristol Bay, Alaska."[5]
Ingle & Rhode has been audited by the Fairtrade Foundation, and a spokesperson in the office at 35 Bruton Street, Mayfair, told a reporter for EthicalWeddings.com that "the process was less of a headache than we might have expected. The Fairtrade Foundation seem to be very much on top of what they are doing, and running things very efficiently." [6]
See also
References and notes
- 1 2 3 4 Josh Sims, "Bling With No Sling," The Independent, 15 November 2007
- ↑ A single gold ring generates 18 tonnes of mine waste, according to the Catholic Agency for Overseas Development.
- ↑ Vogue, 22 May 2009
- ↑ Tony Hawkins, "Zimbabwe Diamond Auction Sparks Fresh Controversy," Financial Times, January 8, 2010
- ↑ "Jewelers Boycott Pebble Mine Gold to Save Bristol Bay Salmon," Environment News Service, November 4, 2010
- ↑ "Why Fairtrade Fairmined Gold Is For Us," Ethical Weddings
External links
- "Supplier Case Studies, Ingle & Rhode—Ethical Jewellery Designers," Ethical Weddings
- Company website