A Closer Look

Opal Overview

Opal

Behind the Commodity: What Opal Really Tells Us

Opal is one of the world’s most enchanting gemstones — prized for its color play, uniqueness, and cultural symbolism. Over 95% of the world’s precious opal is mined in Australia, but deposits also exist in Ethiopia, Mexico, and Brazil. Despite its beauty, the opal supply chain remains largely unregulated, informal, and invisible (Gemological Institute of America, 2023).

The Problem: Informality, Fraud, and Exploitation

Unlike diamonds or gold, opal is not part of most major gemstone traceability or certification initiatives. As a result:

  • Small-scale miners often operate without oversight or protections

  • Origin fraud is common, with synthetic or treated stones misrepresented as natural

  • Lack of documentation makes ethical sourcing nearly impossible

In countries like Ethiopia, where opal mining is rapidly expanding, there are growing concerns about:

  • Unsafe working conditions

  • Community displacement

  • Illicit trade and underpricing that exploits local producers

Meanwhile, conscious consumers and luxury brands increasingly demand transparency, not just sparkle.

The Cost: Lost Value and Market Mistrust

Without traceability:

  • Authentic opal producers lose bargaining power

  • Retailers face reputational risk over sourcing claims

  • Buyers pay premium prices without assurance of origin or ethics

The gap between source and sale creates a disconnect — one that traceability can help close.

The Opportunity: Traceability for Transparency and Fairness

End-to-end traceability in the opal trade can:

  • Prove country and region of origin

  • Certify ethical extraction practices

  • Connect miners directly to ethical brands and collectors

As Dr. Eloïse Gaillou, gemologist at the Paris School of Mines, says: “Traceability elevates opal from a commodity to a story — and that story has value.”

What We’re Doing About It

Palmyra is exploring pilot programs with artisanal opal miners and cooperatives to bring transparency into gemstone sourcing.

Our tools are being adapted to:

  • Digitally log mine origin and miner identity

  • Record weight, treatment status, and transport chain

  • Build verifiable provenance profiles for each stone

The goal: help responsible miners access global markets — and give buyers confidence in every carat.

“Our opals have always been beautiful. Now they’re visible too.”
Nyala Bekele, Opal miner, Ethiopia

Traceability Isn’t About Tech — It’s About Respect

Opals may shimmer with light — but their future must shine with integrity.

The 2025 Checklist for Traceable and Trusted Cocoa

Picture of Sam Lambert

Sam Lambert

Co-Founder Palmyra®

From Olive Groves to Blockchain:
Greek Olive Oil Tokenization

Main Regions

Nigeria

Boki, Nigeria

Focus Areas

Traceability

Tokenization

Solutions

Palmyra Pro
Palmyra App

MOUs Signed

Municipality of Rhodes
Municipality of Messini

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