A G7 ban would hit Russian diamond exports badly because the countries – United States,Canada,Japan,Germany,Britain,Italy and France – account for 70 per cent of global diamond demand.
But it would also hit supply because Russia is the world’s biggest producer of rough diamonds,accounting for 30 per cent of them.
The main task of the meeting will be to agree in a legally sound way on a definition of traceability of diamonds,to be able to determine where the stones come from. Documents seen by Reuters show the proposals vary in strength from light-touch self-regulation to strict import measures.
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“Part of the reason we are stalled is that ... it’s an indirect ban – it’s on Russian diamonds coming[into G7] from outside Russia. It’s more complicated. There’s tension between keeping momentum with a political statement first or whether the technicals need to be decided in full first,” one of the sources familiar with discussions asking not be named said.
“In November we absolutely need to clear things up if we want to meet the January 1 start,” the source said,adding that if a model was picked that required government controls then it would take longer to push through legislation.
Agreement is tough because the details of a ban could boost or deteriorate business conditions for some of the world’s major diamond centres in Belgium,India,or the United States and their share of the global $US87 billion ($138 billion) natural diamond jewellery business.