The Perpetual Planet Initiative strengthens this long-term support for those seekingto understand today’s environmental issues and proposing solutions to tackle them.
Cover The Perpetual Planet Initiative strengthens this long-term support for those seekingto understand today’s environmental issues and proposing solutions to tackle them.

Sustainability has been a part of Rolex’s constitution well before the term became fashionable, but now the Swiss watchmaker is taking more proactive steps towards sustainable development

By all counts, Rolex is a behemoth. Long-term vision is at the heart of the Rolex philosophy and the company’s various activities. Its core values – a passion for quality, a taste for innovation, and a quest for excellence – are based upon concepts of longevity that define its mission across all its activities.

It has always been the company’s mission to manufacture watches that support human achievement. These achievements now incorporate sustainable development to meet the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet theirs. Every day, Rolex takes action to contribute to this crucial collective effort.

In case you missed it: Rolex celebrates 20 years of the Rolex Mentor and Protégé Arts Initiative

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Rolex watches are built to last. Since its beginnings, the brand has always offered a unique, forward-thinking World Service to ensure its products last as long as claimed.
Above Rolex watches are built to last. Since its beginnings, the brand has always offered a unique, forward thinking World Service to ensure its products last as long as claimed (Photo: Francois Lacour/Rolex)

Long before sustainability entered the public consciousness, or became a buzzword, creating durable products was already part of the Rolex playbook. Its watches, as we know, are built to last, and with proper care and maintenance, can be passed down the generations to live several lives.

On the secondary market, Rolex watches are still as sought after. Recognising this, the brand launched its Rolex Certified Pre-Owned programme in 2022, giving customers the chance to pick up second-hand models from an official retailer, with the assurance that the pieces are legitimate. These watches benefit from all the quality criteria and standards that characterise Rolex products and come with an international two-year warranty when they are resold within the official distribution network. 

But sustainability has facets beyond longevity or circularity. To that end, the Swiss manufacture drew up a laundry list of areas that needed improvement on the sustainability front, covering both internal and external aspects of the business.

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Above Rolex implemented a recycling programme to reduce the carbon footprint from its Oystersteel supply chain (Photo: Cédric Widmer/Rolex)

Internally, the company has been doing everything within its means to control its consumption of energy, natural resources and raw materials. Now, it is paying more attention to reducing its emissions of pollutants, while also ensuring that traceability of raw materials is being accounted for along its entire value chain, from supply and manufacturing to distribution.

Material World

A substantial proportion of Rolex watches are hewn from steel—or more specifically, Oystersteel, an alloy that comprises waste from European industrial sources. To reduce the carbon footprint from its Oystersteel supply chain, the brand launched a recycling programme using its own production waste as well as materials from its main supplier.

In 2023, this programme resulted in three 50-tonne Oystersteel test castings, which enabled the company to increase its recycling rate from 70 per cent to 85 per cent, generating a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 35 per cent in 2023 and a projected reduction of 50 per cent by 2025.

Rolex has implemented its own traceability system on the gold it uses, from source to the finished product. The gold comes from three sources: industrial gold from Rolex’s production waste, which is recycled (70 per cent of the total supply); mined gold (18 per cent); and gold residue from the watchmaking and electronics industries (12 per cent). This system is certified by external audits, and has been 99 per cent guaranteed since the end of 2020.

With regards to diamonds, all the stones that Rolex uses are certified by the Kimberley Process, the international system that ensures that the purchase of rough diamonds is not associated with any conflict zones. The brand only procures its diamonds from a handful of suppliers, which have remained the same for several years. Even then, Rolex demands them to declare the provenance of each batch of stones.

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The Perpetual Planet Initiative strengthens this long-term support for those seekingto understand today’s environmental issues and proposing solutions to tackle them.
Above The Perpetual Planet Initiative strengthens this long-term support for those seeking to understand today’s environmental issues and proposing solutions to tackle them (Photo: Stefan Walter/Rolex)

For the Long Haul

At the macro level, Rolex has implemented several initiatives to support the arts and sciences over the years, with the end goal of inspiring future generations as well as preserving the planet for those generations.

For more than 50 years, the Rolex Perpetual Planet Initiative has been supporting individuals and institutions who are striving to understand complex environmental issues and proposing solutions to tackle them. Together with National Geographic, for example, Rolex supports an expedition in the Amazon that seeks to regenerate cloud forests which feed water into the Amazon River basin.

The Rolex Awards for Enterprise is another means of supporting innovative projects. The results speak for themselves: since the awards began in 1976, 43 endangered species have been protected, 23 million trees have been planted, and 57,600 sq km of Amazon rainforest has been preserved. That is an area almost 80 times the size of Singapore.

In a show of support for artistic disciplines such as architecture, cinema and music, Rolex created the Perpetual Arts Initiative, extending a lifeline to artists who are pushing the boundaries in their respective fields. Rolex has sponsored the Oscars since 2017, the Venice Biennale since 2014, and the New Year’s Concert of the Vienna Philharmonic since 2009.

The Rolex Mentor and Protégé Arts Initiative is exactly like it sounds—a programme that pairs established artists with rising talents in order to perpetuate artistic excellence and innovation. Since 2002, Rolex has paired more than 63 mentors and protégé, creating important links between the past, present and future, and contributing to global culture.

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