【法国】Behind the Trade in Supposedly Healing Crystals, a Very Real Danger for Miners

Editor’s Note

This article examines the human cost behind the booming wellness industry’s demand for quartz crystals, highlighting the dangerous informal labor conditions faced by miners in the global supply chain.

Certains détaillants affirment que leurs cristaux proviennent de sources responsables.
The Dangers of Informal Labor

A Western wellness industry is capitalizing on the craze for quartz, prized for its supposedly curative properties despite a lack of scientific evidence. This comes at the peril of the lives of miners subjected to informal labor.
Some retailers claim their crystals come from responsible sources, but the supply chain remains opaque. The majority of the world’s crystalline quartz is now extracted in developing countries, notably in China, India, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Myanmar. Consequently, the traceability of the stones’ origin is compromised. This extraction relies primarily on informal labor, and it is rare for miners to be provided with special equipment, such as reinforced boots or helmets.

“At present, the global crystal market is a bit like the Wild West,” observes Cristina Villegas, director of sustainable markets at Pact, a Washington-based nonprofit, in the columns of the economic and financial daily. “The most serious risks [associated with this industry] range from tunnel collapse to sudden flooding, free falls, or asphyxiation due to lack of air.”

She believes the working conditions and risks miners face “will not change until consumers demand sustainable healing crystals.”
In South Africa, about a hundred kilometers from Johannesburg, Linki Mugidi works crouched at the mouth of a hand-dug tunnel. She chisels the walls in search of those famous crystals prized by Western wellness practitioners, for $4 a day.

“It’s hard, exhausting. My back, my hands, and my shoulders always hurt at the end of the day,” confides this fifty-year-old mother of two to the newspaper. “When the earth is wet, it can easily fall on you. I’m afraid of that.”

She performs this work ten to twelve hours a day, with one Sunday off per month.

“If my situation allowed me to stop, I would”

Ironically, the unregulated working conditions faced by many miners contrast with how crystals are used to soothe anxiety or balance energies. Orchid Sunrise, who runs an online shop selling quartz crystals, is conflicted about this.

“If my financial situation allowed me to stop selling them, I probably would,” she assures, saying she is aware of the miners’ working conditions to the Wall Street Journal. However, she nuances, this industry allows families who mine quartz, as well as her own in Denver, North Carolina, to make a living.

Last fall, Le Journal de Montréal reported on the release of a documentary series titled “The Dangers of Healing Crystals” by Audrey Ruel-Manseau and Joris Cottin. It was learned that on the island of Madagascar, quartz extraction comes at the expense of miners, often teenagers who risk their lives for a pittance.

Matériau issu de l'extraction minière dans la province de Phayao en Thaïlande.
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⏰ Published on: June 25, 2024