SHANGHAI-The prices of the lustrous strings
of pearls that line display cases in Shanghai jewellery stores
are more eye-catching than the glossy gems: some pearl sets cost
under 10 yuan ($1.50) even before bargaining.
"All kinds of people come to buy pearls,
Chinese and foreigners," said Wang Caijiao, who has been selling
pearls in a two-storey shop on Shanghai's bustling Nanjing Road
for seven years.
The massive volume of freshwater pearls on
the market have made the gem affordable to the masses.
That might be good news for the migrant
laborers and factory workers who can now afford pearls but it is
bad news for the pearl industry which frets over the sinking
prices of pearls and the damage to the gem's once exclusive
image.
Now, local Chinese governments, concerned
about environmental damage to lakes and reservoirs from pearl
cultivation, are beginning to rein in production.
And what's healthy for the environment may
end up being healthy for the industry as well.
"The pearl industry has not been doing well
in the past two years because the output is too high," said Li
Jiale, a professor at Shanghai Ocean University.
"The industry needs to reduce quantity and
improve quality."
Pearl farms now earn less than 2,000 yuan per
kilogram of pearls, down from a peak above 20,000 yuan more than
a decade ago, Li said.
In 2007, China produced 1,600 tons of pearls,
over 95 percent of the world's total output, the Gems and
Jewellery Trade Association of China said on its website (www.jewellery.org.cn).
Most are rough-edged, elongated orbs like
those threaded into necklaces in Wang's shop. Perfectly shaped
salt water pearls that are formed by nature can fetch millions
of dollars.
The massive quantities of pearls produced by
China's pearl industry carry a hefty environmental cost.
Lake waters where the pearls are cultivated
are greenish, cloudy and often foul-smelling from a mixture of
pollution and fertilizers dumped into the water to help the
mussels produce pearls faster.
"The disorderly growth of freshwater pearl
cultivation in some regions, resulting in the dumping of large
quantities of fertilizer into lakes and reservoirs, has
seriously damaged those water bodies," said a document on the
website of the agriculture department of central China's Hubei
Province (www.hbagri.gov.cn).
Hubei, one of China's biggest pearl
producers, last year banned pearl cultivation in lakes and
reservoirs, and restricted pearl-producing mussels to ponds.
Several cities and regions in southern China
have also banned or restricted pearl cultivation in recent
years.
But experts said mussels, used to produce the
gems in freshwater, while oysters produce pearls in saltwater,
should not pollute the environment if they are raised properly.
"Mussels eat plankton in the water and can
therefore actually purify it," said Pan Jianlin,
secretary-general of the Jiangsu Province Pearl Industry
Association.
"But some farmers are not raising pearls
properly. They use fertilizer to feed the plankton," he said.
Overly dense mussel populations compound the
pollution, experts said.
"If mussels are raised in an enclosed body of
water, it can easily lead to eutriphication," or a rise in
chemical nutrients that causes a severe deterioration of water
quality, said Cheng Wen, a professor at Xi'an University of
Science and Technology.
Environmental damage from pearl culture is
minor compared with industrial emissions, heavy fertilizer
runoff and untreated sewage that have fouled many Chinese rivers
and lakes over three decades of break-neck economic growth.
Local governments are now under pressure to
attack all sources of pollution.
Hit by the restrictions, as well as rising
costs and falling prices, China's pearl output is expected to
fall to 1,400 tons in 2008 and 1,000 tons by 2010, down more
than one-third from last year, the Gems and Jewellery Trade
Association of China said.
Lower production might not hit profits.
Experience in other pearl-producing regions has shown that
producing smaller quantities of higher quality gems can actually
bring better returns for the industry as a whole.
"It's important that pearl farmers know that
producing 100 kilograms of pearls is not more profitable than
producing 20 kilograms," said Qiu Zhili, associate professor of
earth sciences at Sun Yat-sen University in Guangdong province.
In French Polynesia, where Tahitian pearls
are cultivated, the local industry association compiles output
plans and strictly regulates market access. Pearls that do not
meet gem grade standards cannot be sold as jewellry, Qiu said.
The quality of China's freshwater pearls is
starting to improve and if cultivated properly, with lower
densities of mussels in ponds and longer cultivation times,
experts said they could look more like the smooth, perfectly
round saltwater pearls from Japan and the South Pacific that
command far higher prices.
But that is not likely to happen either
quickly or easily.
"I'd like to see output fall to 100 tons.
Then our pearls would be priced at the same levels as Tahitian
pearls and South Sea pearls. That would be great," said Du
Kunlin, secretary general of Zhejiang Province Pearl Industry
Association.
But he added: "Tens of thousands of pearl farmers live off of
them. You can't just let only 10,000 of them survive."