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The Green Environmental Impact of Lab vs Natural Diamonds
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読む時間 6 min
Behold the height of luxuriously inner conscience as we unveil our wonderful...
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読む時間 6 min
Diamonds that were synthesized in the lab usually have very small footprints on the environment in comparison with the mined diamonds that produce about 85% less carbon emissions per carat. They necessitate no mining and minimal land disruption, and they are mostly powered through renewable energy in controlled laboratories.
Lab diamonds consume about 250 kilowatt-hours per carat; however, it requires approximately 538.5 kilowatt-hours per carat to mine natural diamonds. This would make lab diamonds a lot energy efficient.
Lab-grown diamonds are not such a cause of water pollution since they are produced in controlled environments. Mining for diamonds, on the other hand, may contaminate water sources through acidic mine drainage, soil erosion, and chemicals released during the mining or extraction process.
Effectively, natural diamond mining produces about 125 pounds of carbon emissions for every carat mined, while lab-grown or artificial diamonds tend to generate only about 18 pounds for each carat. This is indicative of about 85% lower carbon footprints.
On the other hand, natural diamond mining breaks down the ecosystem which devastates habitat destruction and may threaten the local wildlife population. Laboratory-created diamonds do not have any direct influence on flora and fauna, animal ecology, or natural habitat as they are synthesized in controlled laboratory conditions.
In that sense, lab-grown diamonds do use less land, as they can be produced in highly compact laboratory facilities. In contrast, diamond mining is a very huge land disturbance, even as mines would stretch across thousands of acres and take much of the infrastructure.
Lab-grown diamonds are the ones that are mostly supplied with their so-called "sustainability certificates," which will confer how they spend energy or how they impact the environment. Although there are natural diamond producers that grant ethical sourcing certificates, it is not that common for them to incorporate detailed information regarding environmental impact.