Government Initiatives to Strengthen Lab-Grown Diamond Trade in India - Limelight Diamonds
July 2019, India: Recently India introduced
an import classification code solely for lab-grown rough diamonds, which would
enable the industry to better identify lab-grown diamonds and keep track of the
goods as opposed to the olden days where all categories were being marked as
synthetic. Perhaps, the move also stems from the actions of GIA (Gemological
Institute of India) and FTC (Federal Trade Commission) earlier this year, where
both banned the word ‘synthetic’ for usage against lab-grown diamonds. Both of
these institutes now classify lab-grown diamonds as real diamonds as they have
the same optical, physical, thermal and chemical properties.
The government has separated the Indian Trade
Clarification (ITC) code for rough synthetic gemstones into diamonds and
non-diamonds, the Gem & Jewellery Export Promotion Council (GJEPC) reported
last week. The move will help organizations such as the GJEPC track the precise
quantities of lab-grown diamonds coming into the market, explained Colin Shah,
the council’s vice chairman.
Previously, all rough synthetic gemstones
carried the same Indian import code — 71042000 — whether they were man-made
diamonds or other stones. From now on, rough lab-grown diamonds will fall into
71042010, while other rough synthetic stones will be assigned 71042090. Trade
data for the two categories is likely to be available starting in August, the
GJEPC said. “This will go a long way in strengthening the efforts of the
council to monitor the two pipelines and maintain their integrity,” said GJEPC
chairman Pramod Agrawal.
With the increasing demand for lab-grown
diamonds, government agencies and international organizations such as the GIA
are initiating efforts to regularize the trade of lab-grown diamonds
in a manner that would motivate the industry patrons to venture with faith into
this peaking industry that is estimated to grow to INR 36,000 CR by end of 2023
and exceed INR 1,00,000 Cr by 2035, according to a recent report by renowned
analyst, Paul Zimnisky.
The increasing prices of natural diamonds due
to decreasing supply, high maintenance and promotion costs, increasing gold
price have led consumers to now look for sustainable alternatives and lab-grown
diamonds fit perfectly into these categories.
Pooja
Sheth, MD & Founder of Limelight Handcrafted Diamonds, adds “The lab-grown diamond industry is booming
and there is no denying that. The consumers are completely aware of the product
that they are being offered and what’s more is that they aren’t the ones to shy
away from it. Initiatives such as introducing new import codes will strengthen
our industry more as this will help to capture precise data leading to more
transparency as opposed to the olden times where knowing the source of a
diamond was a mammoth task . Being an advocate of total transparency, I support
this move and think our industry will benefit greatly from it, be it the
lab-grown or the mined diamond industry.”
Comments
Post a Comment