Tag Archives: fairtrade & fairmined gold

Early steps in Fairtrade Gold – Africa

Julius contacted me via this blog back in January of this year. A Kenyan born activist, Julius had grown tired of the endless fundraising form filling you need to undertake when you work with an NGO. As a local Migori County man he had grown up surrounded by artisanal small-scale miners and was familiar with the lifestyles, environmental impact and social conditions that the many thousands of miners endured in order to to pay there daily way in the world. So I was delighted when Julius showed a considerable amount of interest in how Fairtrade Fairmined Gold could work in his locality. We talked throughout the year and planned. One of the biggest reasons why Julius approached the Fairtrade process, was because the local miners wanted ‘to be free of the economic slavery forced on them by the Asian traders in the region’.

Migori County (MICA) Artisanal Mining COOP was established to allow the local miners and traders to come together and to formalise their relationships in such a way as they could move forward to achieve Fairtrade status and begin exporting their production directly to the international market. Additionally by removing themselves from the economic controls of the bigger traders they would be able to increase their prices and begin lifting themselves out of the poverty that this form of gold trading creates.

Illustratively, the local gold business works through networks of local traders, linking with the artisan miners and then selling their production back to central processing  hubs were the production is weighed, tested for purity and then smelted into simple ‘doray’ bars (unrefined gold bars)  before it is moved to Nairobi and then sold to refiners in Dubai. This system is funded at the front end by money from the traders, who due to their financing, control and monopolise  the entire region.  They buy the gold at discounted rates as much as -28% as I discovered and then adjust for purity. Many miners complain of dodgy scales and purity testing. For example, I had one local processor boast about his cheap PC computer that could scan gold and give a 100% accurate reading on the purity. The genius of this system is it keeps everyone in debt. The local trader may make an average commission as little as KSH 80-100 per gram that he buys on behalf of the Asian buyers with their money. Everyone owes money to these monopoly traders and therefore you have an effective and very efficient form of economic slavery. Any deviation from the proscribed process meets with a swift response as we were to find out.

Over the course of the year, I and others had worked with MICA to see them formalise into a COOP, secure a direct export license and then create a traceable supply chain that would link transparently the miner to the end purchaser of their gold. This in an of itself is progressive as we had to work our way through the myriad of prejudice that exists towards small-scale miners from the refiners, shipping companies and potential financiers and business men, all whose lives are linked to risk mitigation and protecting their investments. Although understandable to a degree, it becomes untenable when in the name of ethics and justice people expect the poor to underwrite their risk with personal guarantees etc.

Anyway with MICA at one end and CRED Jewellery stepping up to the plate to act as the buyer, we booked the trip with a view to enabling the first direct export of gold from a small-scale mining coop from Kenya in the history of the country. The simple aim to enable the COOP to export it first shipment and thereby open up a supply route that would give the COOP access to the international market as well as lay the foundations for a vital part of their becoming a Fairtrade certified mining operation.

However, and this is where it came unstuck, the financial, social, cultural and indentured relationships that have governed this area for so long were not happy with the idea of the local miners being free to export directly, as this would be an erosion of the power they have in the region. Traders have all the power in these artisanal relationships and the COOP discovered that the wrong trader in the mix can kill a process by simply using the economic leverage they have to dictate price, pre-finance behaviour and loyalty. As we came to the day of the trade, it became increasingly obvious that the big traders had a plant in the COOP who simply killed the opportunity, withheld a part of the services needed and prevented the COOP from delivering. That same evening certain members of the COOP were visited by local bully boys and everyone got the message that this movement towards economic independence was not going to be tolerated by the invisible status-quo.

It is a strange thing knowing that you are so near, yet so far. I literally watched the gold disappear in front of my eyes. It was all there, yet the COOP could not bring it all together and deliver and of course this all happened on the same day as the money for the shipment arrived in the COOP account. Also I was now being advised to get out of the area for awhile as things were heating up and the COOP were not happy about the deteriorating security situation. So with driver and passport to hand I jumped into a car and drove to Mwanza to visit some friends there, while the COOP waited for the situation to calm down.

I learned a very valuable lesson on this trip. Traders have the potential to create problems in a way that anyone in the fair trade movement must never underestimate. The Gold mafia are a very real obstacle to change and we must have a strategy for dealing with them. And also that a quality relationship is often forged in adversity, as opposed to success. In many ways the COOP needed to fail on the first trade so that they could fully understand the scale of the mountain they want to climb and how much work they will have to put into their dream.

The COOP I am pleased to say as we parted company with them having transferred the money back to the UK, were very clear of their continued commitment to becoming a Fairtrade COOP. Are now much clearer as to what the obstacles are and also the relationships that prevented their first shipment. In truth we stress tested the system and in doing so all have a greater understanding of what not to do in the future.

Is there a future? Yes there is, and I hope to be able to update everyone on our progress early in the New Year as CRED and MICA seek to facilitate Kenya’s first export from a local COOP.

Photos from the Fairtrade Gold Leaf Weathervane launch at Chichester Cathedral

The Golden Cockerill

The moment of truth...

Chris Davis from Fairtrade Foundation, the Dean of Chichester Cathedral Nicholas Frayling and myself enjoying the moment

The Fairtrade Golden Weathervane

A Golden Weathervane for Chichester Cathedral’s Spire… Signals a World First for the Cathedral and Fairtrade Gold

On Wednesday 2nd November a team of steeplejacks will install an extremely special weathervane on the top of Chichester Cathedral’s 277ft Spire.   Newly gilded in Fairtrade and Fairmined Gold, this unique weathervane is the result of a pioneering collaboration between Chichester Cathedral, Chichester-based ethical jewellers Cred and the Fairtrade Foundation.  When the gilded weathervane is positioned on top of the Cathedral Spire – it will be the first time ever that Fairtrade and Fairmined Gold has been displayed on a public building.

Chichester Cathedral

The gold covering the weathervane was responsibly sourced by Chichester’s Cred jewellers from the Sotrami Mine in Peru – one of the first mines in the world to be certified to Fairtrade standards.   Both the Sotrami Mine and Cred are part of a new – and revolutionary – programme of Fairtrade and Fairmined Certified Gold launched on Valentine’s Day earlier this year.

Fairtrade and Fairmined Gold is the world’s first independent ethical certification system for gold.  The certification enables businesses, from designers and retailers to fabricators and distributors, to offer their customers the guarantee of a product which has been responsibly mined.  Crucially, this means that small scale miners receive a fair price for gold, ensuring a more stable future for them and their communities.

The gilded Cathedral weathervane – a 3ft cockerel – will be installed at the top of the Cathedral Spire on the 2nd November. (Press and Media representatives are invited – see details below). A team of steeplejacks will climb 131ft – 205 steps – to reach the base of the Spire and then ascend a narrow 146ft ladder directly up the side of the Spire, arriving finally at a tiny scaffold platform erected especially for this project around the Spire Cap.

The Very Revd Nicholas Frayling, Dean of Chichester, explains why the project is so important: ‘Fairtrade and Fairmined Gold provides a lifeline for thousands of impoverished and exploited miners in Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru.  If every jeweller, and indeed every customer, were to insist on only gold sourced in this way then thousands of small scale miners, and their communities, would be guaranteed a better future.  The cost of this project has been borne by a private donor to whom we are very grateful, but the wider ambitions of Fairtrade and Fairmined Gold are priceless.’

Chichester’s Cred jewellers have been pivotal to the realisation of Fairtrade and Fairmined Gold and were one of the first ethical jewellers in the UK to produce collections sourced in this way.

Prior to the gilding of the weathervane, the gold was sent to Italy to be turned into gold leaf.  The Italian company Manetti is one of Florence’s oldest companies and the only remaining organisation in Europe who are able to turn gold into gold leaf.  The leaf needed to gild the weathervane is just 8 microns thick (1 micron is 1000th of a millimetre) and is made out of 23 ½ carat gold.  The gold started life as a pure 24 carat but the leafing process introduces a small amount of copper.

 

Endnotes:

 

1.  Press and media enquiries welcome.  Interviews and images available.

For any further information please contact Ruth Poyner at Chichester Cathedral on 01243 812482 or visitors@chichestercathedral.org.uk

For further information about Fairtrade and Fairmined Gold please contact Stuart Barber at the Fairtrade Foundation on 020 7440 7695 or email stuart.barber@fairtrade.org.uk

Photocall invitation to come and see the steeplejacks install the weathervane.  An event especially for Press and Media representatives will take place on the 2nd November at the Cathedral:

  • 10.30 onwards opportunity to film/photograph the weathervane at ground level.
  • 11.30 weathervane blessing and opportunity to meet/interview representatives from the Cathedral, the Fairtrade Foundation, Cred Jewellers and Manetti.
  • 12 noon onwards opportunity to film/photograph the steeplejacks install the weathervane at the top of the Spire.

If you would like to attend, or for further information please contact Ruth Poyner at Chichester Cathedral on 01243 812482 or visitors@chichestercathedral.org.uk

2. The weathervane was removed from the Spire for refurbishment earlier this year, as part of a five yearly survey of the Spire.  The steeplejacks have also recently completed maintenance work on the Spire stonework: Chichester Cathedral costs £1000 a day to maintain.  The Cathedral is famous for being both ancient and modern, where original medieval features exist alongside a famous collection of modern artworks, including works by Marc Chagall, John Piper, and Graham Sutherland.  Chichester Cathedral is open every day and all year with free entry www.chichestercathedral.org.uk

3. The Fairtrade Foundation is an independent certification body which licenses use of the FAIRTRADE Mark on products which meet international Fairtrade standards.  Its vision is of a world in which justice and sustainable development are at the heart of trade structures and practices so that everyone, through their work, can maintain a decent and dignified livelihood and develop their full potential.

The Fairtrade and Fairmined system means miners will receive a set Fairtrade minimum price for their gold, plus a Fairtrade premium to invest in community and business development projects, these include better working conditions, education, health and environmental restoration.  To date, three miners’ organisations, representing 2,500 miners and their families are being certified under the Fairtrade and Fairmined standards.

Fairtrade and Fairmined Gold was launched in February 2010.  Only products created from Fairtrade and Fairmined Certified Gold can bear the dual stamp of the Fairtrade and Fairmined marks.  The world’s oldest jeweller Garrard, pioneering ethical jeweller Cred, and luxury bespoke jeweller Harriet Kelsal were among the first 20 companies to launch Fairtrade and Fairmined collections.  To date, 34 leading jewellers are designing fabulous collections and one-off pieces.  www.fairtrade.org.uk/gold

4. Cred Jewellers have been trading for 10 years in Chichester and are part of the wider Cred Foundation.  Cred Jewellery was one of the first pioneering companies to launch Fairtrade and Fairmined Gold products and now 34 designers and jewellers have followed them nationwide.  Cred’s Greg Valerio was instrumental in the realisation of the Fairtrade and Fairmined Gold programme.  Greg’s passionate campaigning for change in the jewellery and mining industries led to the launch of the scheme earlier this year and this achievement was also recognised at the Observer Ethical Awards 2011 where Greg was named Global Campaigner of the Year.  To find out more visit www.credjewellery.com