Editor’s Note
This article highlights a key industry discussion at the JCK Las Vegas show, where panelists emphasized the urgent need for clearer terminology around sustainability and ethics. The development of the CIBJO Blue List aims to provide much-needed guidelines for transparent consumer communication.

There is a pressing need in the industry for clarity regarding terms related to social and environmental responsibility, panelists said during a seminar on “What Does It Mean to Be Ethical? Have Your Say” at the recent JCK Las Vegas show.
All the panelists were involved in developing the new CIBJO Blue List, which is meant to provide the industry with guidelines for how it communicates to consumers about sustainability and related issues.
CIBJO’s project will provide “a list of terminology, like a dictionary,” Cavalieri said. “It will be something that everybody may clearly and simply understand.”
Feriel Zerouki, president of the World Diamond Council and chief trade and industry officer for De Beers, said the initial draft of the Blue List was five years in the making.
The CIBJO team consulted various dictionaries, legal papers, international and industry standards, and experts in different sectors. It plans to test the terminology with consumer focus groups.
Discussions among the 12-person Blue List committee occasionally got contentious, said Purvi Shah, head of ethical and sustainable value chains for De Beers.
The final document “tried not to be prescriptive,” she said.
Sara Yood, president and CEO of the Jewelers Vigilance Committee, noted that some of the existing standards out there, such as the Federal Trade Commission’s (FTC) “Green Guides,” cover more than jewelry.
CIBJO’s new standards should help if the FTC goes ahead with its planned Green Guides revision, said Ronnie VanderLinden, president of the International Diamond Manufacturers Association.
However, Shah cautioned that following the Blue List doesn’t guarantee a jeweler would be in compliance with local laws. But the Blue List does incorporate the basic framework of most national laws, which say that any claims must be substantiated.
The Blue List is now open for public consultation, and Shah said some “rich and insightful” comments have already been submitted to the committee.
The panel was moderated by the author of the article.