Zim working on diamond bourse• Consultants hired to spearhead project

via Zim working on diamond bourse• Consultants hired to spearhead project • Plans to become regional trading hub | The Herald January 13, 2016

Lloyd Gumbo Senior Reporter
Zimbabwe has started the process of turning itself into a regional diamond trading hub by inviting consultants to help establish its own diamond bourse expected to attract traders from all over the world.

The move follows a study trip undertaken by the Government and mining parastatals’ officials to the Antwerp Diamond Trading Centre in Belgium in 2013.

The officials have consulted further, resulting in the Minerals Marketing Corporation of Zimbabwe (MMCZ) inviting consultants to spearhead the establishment of the bourse.

Bidding consultants will hold a second compulsory site visit at the MMCZ offices in Harare tomorrow ahead of the closing of the tender on January 26.

The diamond bourse will be a standardised one-stop shop for trading in diamonds and semi-precious minerals and will change the face of Zimbabwe.

It is envisaged that with the bourse in place, Harare will be turned into a diamond city.

It is expected that most major world diamond buyers will come to the sales, while others will seek to set up shops to sell jewellery and other diamond artefacts.

MMCZ deputy general manager (marketing) Mr Masimba Chandavengerwa said yesterday that the bourse will attract other diamond producers on the continent and beyond.

“Once we have that bourse, we will be able to attract big players in the diamond industry who buy in the tune of at least $10 million each,” he said.

“Most international diamond buyers have expressed their interest to come here, but they have been avoiding us because we have been doing our things in a fragmented manner.

“By having a diamond bourse, it means we will ensure that the grading, cutting and polishing are standardised so that we don’t have different grades coming from different miners. Buyers will know our grades from wherever they are and they will not be shortchanged.”

Mr Chandavengerwa said the diamond bourse will demand syncronisation of mining activities, logistics, cutting and polishing.

He said banks, insurance companies, cutting and polishing as well as those who are into jewellary will all be under one roof, which would improve security of the precious gems and eliminate pilferage.

Zimbabwe’s diamond deposits constitute nearly 30 percent of the world diamond deposits and as such, Mr Chandavengerwa said once the bourse was established, it would be easy for other countries on the continent to come and trade here.

“Because of the volume of material (diamonds) we anticipate here, we will be able to attract other diamond players such as South Africa, Botswana, Angola, Democratic Republic of Congo and Namibia.

“They will prefer coming to Zimbabwe to going to Antwerp or the Dubai Diamond Exchange,” said Mr Chandavengerwa. “So, when they come here, we will also benefit in the form of taxes that other countries with diamond bourses are benefiting from.

“The most important thing about a diamond bourse is that everything gets to be standardised, for instance mining, cutting and polishing, jewellary manufacturing and even the way they are charged. The problem is that at the moment, different miners are producing different quality and charging different prices. But with this arrangement in place, buyers will know our standardised quality from wherever they are.”

MMCZ has so far held several diamond auctions at the Zimbabwe diamond tendering facility at the Harare International Airport.

If the diamond trade centre is eventually established, it would compete with major centres like Antwerp, New York, Mumbai in India and Dubai in the United Arab Emirates.

The setting up of a fully-fledged diamond auctioning centre in Zimbabwe will require the adoption of appropriate technology as a main priority.

Experts have always insisted that the best way for Zimbabwe to maximise gains from the sell of its gems is to establish such an auctioning centre in the mold of Antwerp.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 1
  • comment-avatar
    Mukanya 8 years ago

    “Because of the volume of material (diamonds) we anticipate here, we will be able to attract top corrupt practitioners, to further and consolidate the practice.”