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De Beers will pause mining in South Africa's Venetia region for two years

De 'Beers announced on Monday that it will pause production at its Venetia Mine in South Africa for a period of two years. This is part of an overall effort to streamline operations and reduce costs in order to cope with the continued weakness in rough diamond trading.

Anglo American is the majority owner of the diamond producer. The company said that the move would delay and reduce some expenditures on an underground mine project, but maintain investment in infrastructure for a higher level of production when the market conditions improve.

Venetia is South Africa's biggest diamond mine in terms of value. It will employ 4,400 workers and produce 2,23 million?carats. In 2025, it accounted for 10.3% the total group 'rough diamond production of De Beers.

After 30 years of open pit mining, Venetia's new underground mine will begin production in July 2023.

De Beers plans to reconfigure the global operating model of its business to reduce costs and focus on its core activities. However, it has not provided any further details about these changes.

Al Cook, Chief Executive Officer of De?Beers, said in a press release that "our commitment is to focus our efforts on value and improve resilience to position us to compete well as the industry conditions recover."

Sale

Anglo placed De Beers, one of the world's largest diamond companies, up for sale by May 2024. This was part of an overall restructuring in response to falling diamond prices, and the rise of synthetic diamonds.

Cook stated in an interview at the NEXT Europe Conference in London on June 16 that he hoped for the De Beers Sale to happen "in a few weeks, rather than months".

Industry forecasts predict that mine closures and production pauses in South Africa and Lesotho, as well as Canada, will lead to a global supply contraction by 2027. Atharva Singh reported from Bengaluru, Nelson Banya from Harare and Janane Venkatraman edited the article.

(source: Reuters)