Ellah Muchemwa: ADPA to launch Africa's first diamond mining standard next year

The African Diamond Producers Association (ADPA), which is based in Luanda, Angola, and represents the interests of mainly African diamond producers and those with the potential to produce diamonds, will next year launch the Sustainable Development...

04 november 2024

Dmitry Fedorov: I want our jewelry to be displayed at a museum in the future

Dmitry Fedorov is the founder of the eponymous jewelry house. His main focus is the creation of Orthodox-inspired premium luxury jewelry of high artistic merit. He told Rough&Polished about his journey in the jewelry industry, about choosing the ‘Orthodox...

28 october 2024

Responsible business practices ‘no longer optional’, says WDC President Feriel Zerouki

The president of the World Diamond Council takes time out of her busy schedule to tell Rough&Polished readers about the critical work of the WDC. Zerouki, the first female present of the body, which includes all the important industry organizations among...

14 october 2024

James Campbell: Botswana Diamonds optimistic as it enters uncharted territory of using AI for mineral exploration

London-listed Botswana Diamonds has expressed optimism about the company’s use of artificial intelligence (AI) to scan the exploration database in Botswana to look for new mineralised deposits. Company managing director James Campbell told Rough...

07 october 2024

Artur Salyakayev: For me, happiness is freedom to make my ideas happen and create valuable products

Artur Salyakayev is an art entrepreneur, founder of the International Jewelry Academy (IJA) and the INCRUA jewelry company. He has initiated and developed successful projects in jewelry industry and services sector. He is also a leading expert...

30 september 2024

Sudan boosts H1 gold output as smuggling reduced

04 august 2021
Sudan’s official gold output rose to 30.3 tonnes in the first half of 2021, compared with 15.6 tonnes in the same period, a year earlier as authorities reduced the illicit cross-border trade.
Bloomberg quoted Sudanese Mineral Resources head of planning and research Al-Sadig Al-Haj as saying that the North African country earned about 38.2 billion pounds ($86 million) from gold between January and the end of June 2021.
He said Sudan is targeting 104 billion pounds from a total of 100 tonnes by the end of the year.
Finance Minister Gibril Ibrahim said last June that Sudan was trying to attract private investment to the industry dominated by informal mining.
The government had been earning a relatively small proportion of total gold output due to smuggling.

Mathew Nyaungwa, Editor in Chief of the African Bureau, Rough&Polished