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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Marange, Chiadzwa and other diamond fields and the Kimberley Process - Index of articles
Marange
tenders taking off in a big way
Diamond Intelligence
Briefs
February 01, 2012
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It was two am
here in Washington DC, yesterday when a phone call from Harare made
me jump - and I knew the night was over. A Belgian trader said that
he is attending a rough tender by the Diamond Mining Company (DMC),
which is currently tendering some 472,000crats. DMC is a reincarnation
of what was once called Pure Diamonds - the name of an associated
diamond trading company in Dubai. It is a joint venture with the
government-owned Zimbabwe Mining Development Company (ZMDC).
Another
KP-Compliant Mine?
The trader posed
an urgent question regarding the mine's KP compliance: DMC
people claim that they will have a Kimberley Process Certification
Scheme (KP) certificate no later than February 7th - the closing
date of the tender - and they are selling now so that they can get
their revenue stream started right away.
I dropped a
line to Stéphanie Chardon, the Chair of the KP's Working
Group on Monitoring (WGM), asking him if there is another KP-compliant
mine in Marange
that we don't know about. His answer was "yes"
- there is.
"The KP Monitors
visited DMC and found it to be compliant," said Chardon. "This
was discussed by WGM on 26 January and no objections were raised,
so it seems to be 'kosher'. The KP Monitors were scheduled
to conduct another visit on the occasion of the firs export,"
he added, thus confirming the report by the trader that Monitor
Abbey Chikane would be there this week.
DMC claims that
it have been mining for some five months; its relatively modest
alluvial mining operation produces some 7,000 carats per day, which
at US$50/PC would be worth an estimated us$350,000. That's
about US$130,000,000 a year. That's at least another 2.5 million
carats of predominantly cheaper goods entering the diamond business
on the supply side - assuming that this level of production is maintained.
That's probably a wrong assumption, as the output will be
more as mechanical capacity is enhanced and improved. DMC is managed
by VIC Botha and Gile Sithole. There is considerable involvement
of Indians and Lebanese.
A level playing
field
The hardly noticed entry
of DMC into the industry as a KP-compliant mine raises a number
of questions. Though one might argue that Marange has ceased to
be an issue, that it has become just a matter of routine and that
there is no need to announce such entry to the industry at large,
one might also argue to the contrary. Single and Specific mine certification
remains an oddity and is quite contrary to the way the KP system
works, where only countries are considered compliant or not compliant,
and "new mines" are therefore neither KP-related nor
noticeable events.
But we see it
as a matter of maintaining a level playing field - of fair competition.
How can one compete in a Marange Tender if there hasn't been
any public notice of the KP approval of another mine?
The Chinese owned Anjin
mine will sell some 500 000 carats and Marange Resources will sell
some 350,000 carats. Mbada is also having a sale, but I am not aware
of how much they are offering, though I would assume that it wouldn't
be less than 400,000 carats.
Not all sales will need
KP certificates, as in Harare there are ostensibly a few diamond
manufacturing units employing some 50 cutters altogether. This doesn't
mean that the goods aren't exported, but we wouldn't
know.
My back-of-the-envelope
calculations show 1.65 -1.7 million carats for sale in the next
weeks. At US$50 p/c. that is "too much" money (US$85million
to US$90 million), but only 10 percent of these carats will be gem
quality, and the rest will be cheaper goods for which there is presently
little appetite. Both DMC and Anjin sell from inventories accumulated
over periods when they were denied KP certificates. Prices are bound
to be under enormous pressures - with a spill over effect on the
rest of the diamond market. More on this later.
Courier Companies
As we reported
previously, none of the usual courier companies (BRINKS, Malca-Amit,
etc.) will take good in Harare - because these Marange Mines are
under US OFAC sanctions against Zimbabwe. DMC may not be listed
(yet) per se, but it's 50% shareholder, ZMDC, is - and that's
enough for sanctions to apply.
Therefore, each
and every buyer has developed his own "transportation arrangement"
- mostly by passenger on the Ethiopian Airline's convenient
(but nightmarish in terms of seating comfort) (Harare - Tel Aviv
flights. The majority of parcels would be boarded in Johannesburg.
OFAC or no OFAC, the rough diamonds do go out- and the resultant
polished finds its way to the United States, or more precisely,
mostly to the United States, which is the preferred destination
for most of the world's cheap diamond production. (From a
diamond perspective it is our best "junk market.")
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