There are hundreds of small and large placer mining operations in Alaska actively producing gold in the US. Placer mining sites sit along creeks and streams, giving miners the chance to re-mine for any nuggets or fine gold left over from the Yukon’s Klondike Gold Rush in the late 1890s.
Meanwhile, since 1991, 12 Pacific salmon runs have been listed under the Endangered Species Act (ESA). These routes that salmon use to make their run to their spawning beds each year are often adjacent to placer mining sites.
The causes for the ESA classification are not limited to mining. Add logging, urbanization, record wildfires and landslides in the region, and salmon runs don’t stand a chance. But RESOLVE, a nonprofit organization tackling some of the planet’s most critical challenges through innovative, unexpected partnerships, wants to fix that.
Their proposal: Combine re-mining with restoration to improve the streams and open them back up for salmon, grayling and other fish species to return.
Since RESOLVE first introduced the Salmon Gold partnership in 2017, the organization is connecting local placer miners, environmentalists and government agencies in order to course correct the damage done from historic mining in the region. Apple — who uses small amounts of gold in electronic components throughout its products — and global luxury jeweler Tiffany & Co. will source gold from these miners who have committed to restore and improve the land they’re operating on when they’re done.
“As we continue to increase our use of recycled materials, we’re seeking out innovative ways to source gold responsibly,” says Paula Pyers, Apple’s head of Supplier Responsibility, in a statement. “Partnering with Tiffany, a pioneer in sustainable sourcing, as well as RESOLVE ensures Salmon Gold can be an example of how the industry can evolve.”
Source: Apple Inc.
MacDailyNews Take: Let’s make it happening!
Happening or fappening?
Of course, that “Let’s make it happening” is a reference to gold miner Tony Beets from the Gold Rush series.
Do big investors even care about saving the ecology? I’d hardly think so. Apple is not going to be praised for responsible gold sourcing, especially if such sourcing drives up the price of gold and the price of the iPhone with it. I’m for what Apple is doing, but Apple is always taking the most difficult path and the company is still constantly criticized for not doing enough. Humans have been tearing up the Earth for riches for hundreds of years and a couple of companies trying to correct things aren’t going to make much of a difference. I’m not saying they shouldn’t try, but I have a feeling there will be many more companies who will continue ruin the ecology in pursuit of easy profits.
Your comments are too long and meandering, get to the point
for macnificentseven48
plus they are IDIOTIC! Nick was being too nice…
your almost wrong all the time – what gives?
His repeated message is: investors are greedy and don’t care about doing the right thing, so Apple shouldn’t bother. Some of us disagree.