Golden rules for better gold
By signing up to 12 Golden Rules, jewellery retailers and other gold users can work with their suppliers to bring an end to dirty gold
The Golden Rules set out basic standards for gold mining:
- Respect for basic human rights outlined in international conventions and law.
- Free, prior and informed consent of affected communities.
- Safe working conditions.
- Respect for workers’ rights and labour standards (including the eight core ILO conventions.
- Ensure that operations are not located in areas of armed or militarised conflict.
- Ensure that projects do not force communities off their lands.
- No dumping of mine wastes into the ocean, rivers, lakes or streams.
- Ensure that projects are not located in protected areas, fragile ecosystems or other areas of high conservation or ecological value.
- Ensure that projects do not generate sulphuric acid in perpetuity.
- Cover all costs of closing down and cleaning up mine sites.
- Fully disclose information about social and environmental effects of projects.
- Allow independent verification of the above.
Thanks to pressure from CAFOD supporters, seven UK jewellers including Goldsmiths Beaverbrooks, F. Hinds and Fraser Hart have signed the Golden Rules.
In the USA, 23 jewellers have also signed up, including Tiffany’s, the Signet Group and Cartier.
CAFOD is still campaigning for UK company Argos to sign up too - and for all the companies to turn their promises into action.

Take action: Shine a light in the darkness
Please sign our petition calling on the world's largest mining company to listen to communities in the Philippines worried about the effect mining will have on their land - plus send a personal message of solidarity to the people of Macambol

![Refugees gather at a makeshift camp near Kibati, 12 km north of the provincial capital of Goma, October 29, 2008 [REUTERS/Stringer, courtesy www.alertnet.org]](/var/storage/images/about-cafod/where-we-work/dr-congo/images/refugees-who-fled-fighting/934156-2-eng-GB/refugees-who-fled-fighting_0column50_04space_landscape.jpg)
![CAFOD supported communities with seeds, tools and training to help local people move home and reintegrate in Northern Uganda [CAFOD]](/var/storage/images/about-cafod/where-we-work/uganda/images/move-home-and-reintegrate/945382-1-eng-GB/move-home-and-reintegrate_0column50_04space_landscape.jpg)
![Unearth Justice vigil in front of BHP Billiton's AGM in London, calling on the company to stop keeping communities in Macambol, Philippines, in the dark about a proposed new mine [Adrian White]](/var/storage/images/events/unearth-justice-vigil/966406-1-eng-GB/unearth-justice-vigil_0column50_04space_landscape.jpg)
![Fatna (right) brings home wood that she and some neighbours have harvested from outside the camp in Kubum, south Darfur [Paul Jeffery/ACT/Caritas]](/var/storage/images/about-cafod/where-we-work/sudan/images/fatna-right-brings-home-wood/247664-2-eng-GB/fatna-right-brings-home-wood_0column50_04space_landscape.jpg)
![Monk Emm Oeun, 28, leads a ‘Happy Happy’ session for children who are affected by HIV and AIDS. The aim of the session is to bring the children together to have fun and forget about their worries [Annie Bungeroth]](/var/storage/images/opinion/salvation-centre-cambodia-scc-/966374-1-eng-GB/salvation-centre-cambodia-scc-_0column50_04space_landscape.jpg)
![Jade, 9yrs old, marking out 'Our Future' in coral on the beach at Pujada Bay [Simon Rawles]](/var/storage/images/watch-and-listen/our-future/966390-1-eng-GB/our-future_0column50_04space_landscape.jpg)

![Franck Bura from DRC campaigns for no dirty gold [Richard Greenwood]](/var/storage/images/get-involved/campaigning/unearth-justice/images/franck-nugget/133796-2-eng-GB/franck-nugget_1column50_12space_landscape.jpg)

