The World Diamond Conference, held earlier this year at Toronto’s Four Seasons Hotel, attracted delegates from a broad cross-section of the global diamond industry, including a large Canadian contingent. Without a doubt, the social highlight of the event was the dinner at the Royal Ontario Museum and the after-dinner tour of its fabulous mineral collection, which is world-class to say the least.
Sponsored by International Investment Conferences and Australian-based Louthean Publishing, the conference was the venue where
The spark that ignited the stock was probably not only De Beers’ takeover offer for Winspear but its subsequent attempt to acquire
Not surprisingly, Canada’s emerging diamond industry garnered plenty of attention at the conference, partly because of the “conflict diamonds” controversy. Indeed, the issue spawned as many opinions as there are classifications of diamonds, which is probably saying a lot. There was, nonetheless, an almost universal consensus that the authenticity of Canadian diamonds would be much easier to prove than anything from Africa, where rough diamond sales have funded horrific wars in places such as Angola, Sierra Leone and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
With the conflict diamonds issue attracting so much attention, the government of the Northwest Territories has started work on a program designed to certify selected diamonds that are mined, cut and polished in the Territories.
According to Martin Irving, the government’s director of diamond projects, “the monitoring system will follow diamonds from the producer through to the factory.” The government of the Northwestern Territories and two diamond-cutting firms, Deton’Cho Diamonds and Arslanian Cutting Works, hope to have the certification program in place by late fall. De Beers has also made a public commitment on the part of its suppliers to avoid purchases from conflict areas.
The conference featured a large Australian contingent, including
In early August, Edensor Nominees, a trustee for the Joseph Gutnick family trust, agreed to put up to $20 million into Tahera Corp, which has extensive diamond exploration holdings in the Northwest Territories. Tahera’s Jericho diamond project, near
Somewhat of a legend in Australia, Gutnick has been closely associated with several of that country’s major gold discoveries, among them the Bronzewing mine, east of Wiluna in Western Australia. Gold mining giant
Rimfire, on the other hand, is staying close to home, focusing its exploration efforts on tenements in New South Wales. Its hybrid geological model takes into account the fact that the diamond occurrences within its holdings are associated with Jurassic mafic (basaltic) volcanics; they also have a set of associated minerals or inclusions that are distinctly different from those of conventional kimberlitic and lamproite-related diamonds. No source has ever been found for any of the alluvial diamonds in the region.
No conference would be complete without at least one exhibitor pushing its presence on the Internet. Capitalizing on the dot-com mania that has diverted so much funding out of the minerals sector into Internet stocks was
Diamond producers have several advantages over mainstream mining companies (gold and base metal producers) in that they have a high-value product that can be marketed directly to the consumer in various ways. Nonetheless, security problems associated with Internet purchases of any type have discouraged many consumers from purchasing diamonds and other products on-line.
The Australians, in particular, were impressed with the number of quality exploration projects in Canada and the high percentage of kimberlites in the Northwest Territories and elsewhere that are diamondiferous. Nonetheless, there appeared to be a consensus at the conference that the N.W.T. is very much a mature play and that other areas, including the James Bay Lowlands in Ontario and Quebec (where exploration logistics are more favourable), would draw most of the funds allocated to Canadian diamond exploration.
Quebec’s attractive flow-through share program for mineral exploration and the possibility that Ontario might initiate a competitive one are proving to be difficult to resist for many companies. In today’s tough exploration market, even a modest variation on on the 1980s flow-through program would be a welcome relief.
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