The Citizen (KZN)

Reshaping the market

LAB-GROWN DIAMONDS PUT NATURAL GEMS UNDER PRESSURE ‘Once the customer sees it for herself, they are sold.’

- Surat

The glittering diamonds sparkle the same but there are key difference­s: mined natural gems are more than a billion years old, while laboratory-made rocks are new and cost less than half the price.

Man-made gems are reshaping the $89 billion (R1.6 trillion) global diamond jewellery market, especially in the west Indian city of Surat where 90% of the world’s diamonds are cut and polished.

In Smit Patel’s gleaming lab, technician­s drop crystal diamond “seed” slices into reactors, mimicking the extreme pressure far undergroun­d.

“Once the customer sees it for herself, they are sold. I believe this is the future,” said Patel, director of Greenlab Diamonds and the third generation of his family to deal in diamonds.

From seed to ring-ready jewels, his team takes less than eight weeks to produce a diamond virtually indistingu­ishable from a mined gem.

“It’s the same product, it’s the same chemical, the same optical properties,” Patel said.

Lab-grown diamond exports from India tripled in value between 2019 and 2022, while export volumes rose by 25% between April and October 2023, up from 15% in the same period a year earlier, according to the latest industry data.

“We’ve grown at 400% year-onyear in volume,” Patel said.

Reactors in labs such as Patel’s

are pumped full of carbon-containing gases such as methane and the crystal grows under heat and pressure.

Rough diamonds are then taken to another facility where hundreds of workers design, cut and polish the stones.

The global market share by value of lab-grown gems rocketed from 3.5% in 2018 to 18.5% in 2023, New York-based industry analyst Paul Zimnisky told AFP, and will likely exceed 20% this year.

That has heaped pressure on an industry already racked by geopolitic­al turmoil and slumping demand. Machine-made diamonds were first developed in the early 1950s but it took technologi­cal leaps to create a commercial­ly via

ble process less than a decade ago.

Producers boast that their gems come at a lower carbon cost, although there are questions about whether the energy-intensive process is any better for the environmen­t.

Patel said his lab uses solar energy from the local grid, although others suck up electricit­y from carbon-heavy sources.

And while mined gem sellers say “conflict diamonds” from war zones are kept off the market through the internatio­nal Kimberley Process certificat­ion scheme, lab producers argue their facilities guarantee a clean record. Such environmen­tal and humanitari­an claims have helped make lab-grown stones a popular

choice for engagement rings.

In February 2023, 17% of diamond engagement rings sold in the United States – the world’s biggest consumer of natural stones – used lab-grown gems, according to industry analyst Edahn Golan.

By Golan’s assessment, it is now 36%.

This has partly been made possible by hundreds of companies in China and India, both among the largest producers of man-made stones.

Indian lab diamond makers exported 4.04 million carats between April and October 2023, a 42% year-on-year increase, according to India’s Gem and Jewellery Export Promotion Council.

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? ALL THAT GLITTERS. Smit Patel, director at Greenlab Diamonds, with a lab-grown diamond produced at his manufactur­ing firm.
Picture: AFP ALL THAT GLITTERS. Smit Patel, director at Greenlab Diamonds, with a lab-grown diamond produced at his manufactur­ing firm.

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