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Can diamonds recover — or is this the new normal?

by Editor
December 5, 2025
in Magazine
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Diamonds account for 35.4% of Namibia’s December 2023 export bill
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For most of the past century diamonds were treated as a dependable asset.

They held value, generated revenue, underpinned mining towns, and contributed to government income.

In Namibia, offshore and land-based production created employment, infrastructure and foreign-exchange stability.

The industry appeared secure.

The 2008 financial crisis challenged that assumption. Reduced consumer spending pushed prices down, cutting into polished demand and slowing sales.

Namibia was affected less dramatically than some markets, but the shift was noticeable.

Namdeb scaled back land operations, exploration slowed, and state revenue weakened.

Diamonds, once considered resilient, proved vulnerable to global conditions.

The market regained momentum between 2010 and 2014 as demand from China and India increased. Namibia’s offshore output strengthened, and export earnings improved.

However, underlying consumer behaviour began to change.

Younger buyers showed less attachment to traditional jewellery purchases, and retailers adjusted pricing to stimulate sales.

The belief that natural diamonds held an unchallenged position started to weaken.

From 2015 to 2020, the market flattened rather than collapsed.

Prices stagnated, inventories built up, and producers restricted supply to prevent further decline.

Namibia continued to generate strong marine production, but beneficiation efforts struggled with narrow margins. The industry continued to function, yet long-term confidence faded.

The post-pandemic period briefly reversed this trend. In 2021 and 2022, weddings and jewellery demand surged, leading to sharp price increases.

Namibia recorded strong output and revenue during this period, supported particularly by offshore recovery. Many stakeholders viewed this as a return to growth. It was temporary.

From late 2022 onward, natural diamonds entered a deeper downturn.

Lab-grown stones became widely accepted, visually comparable, and significantly cheaper.

Global demand softened, especially in the United States and China. Rough prices declined steadily.

In Namibia, high-value marine production continued, but revenue per carat no longer reliably tracked volume. Land operations became more cost-sensitive, and the predictability of royalty flows into the national budget declined.

This raises the current question: can natural diamonds recover, or has the industry entered a new long-term equilibrium?

A complete reversal of historical pricing is unlikely without structural change.

Alternative products, different consumer priorities, and price competition now influence the market.

Any future recovery will depend on differentiation — not on volume alone.

Natural diamonds must be positioned through traceability, ethical production, geological rarity and value-chain transparency.

Namibia holds an advantage through its marine resource base, which is difficult to replicate and produces high-quality stones.

However, strengthening market identity is now essential. The product can no longer rely on tradition to justify price.

The industry is not in collapse, but it is no longer defined by automatic growth.

The past 20 years have seen a shift from certainty to variability.

Namibia’s diamond sector can recover into a stronger position, but only through strategy, modernised marketing and cost-aligned production models.

Without this, current price levels risk becoming the long-term standard.

The next phase for diamonds will be defined less by geology and more by adaptation.

Supply alone is no longer enough to secure value.

The global market now responds to perception, transparency, price competitiveness and ethical assurance.

Producers who understand this will navigate the new landscape. Those who rely on history will fall behind it.

For Namibia, the question is not whether the resource remains valuable — it does.

The Atlantic seabed continues to yield strong production, and Namibia remains one of the world’s most important primary sources of gem-quality diamonds.

But price is no longer protected solely by scarcity, and demand cannot be assumed. The industry must now earn value actively rather than inherit it.

This requires a shift in how diamonds are positioned, marketed and sold.

Consumers increasingly want proof of origin, clarity on environmental impact and confidence in traceability. Countries such as Botswana and Canada have already begun to emphasise provenance as a selling point. Namibia has the same opportunities, particularly given the strength of offshore mining, which offers a distinct, comparatively controllable extraction environment.

Innovation in recovery technology will also matter. Higher efficiency offsets weaker prices, and extended exploration buffers future production decline.

Continued investment in new mining vessels, sediment-mapping systems, automated recovery and low-disturbance extraction will protect capacity when market pressure grows.

The cost of inaction is greater than the cost of research.

Market engagement will determine the remainder. If Namibia and other producers strengthen branding, transparency, beneficiation outcomes and long-term supply planning, the industry can rebuild market confidence and stabilise revenue.

If not, diamonds may settle into a lower-value plateau where profitability depends solely on cost control and production optimisation rather than premium pricing.

The past 20 years have been defined by adjustment.

The next twenty will be defined by choice. Natural diamonds still hold a position in global luxury, but they no longer occupy it alone. Recovery is possible — but it will not come as a rebound. It will be built deliberately, through policy, pricing discipline, consumer engagement, origin assurance and a willingness to redesign how value is communicated.

In practical terms, this means Namibia must think beyond volume. It must lean into rarity, quality assurance, ethical mining credentials and end-to-end value visibility. It must treat the diamond as a differentiated product rather than a commodity. A natural stone with verified origin still carries a market advantage — but only when the buyer is convinced of that advantage.

Whether diamonds recover fully will depend on the decisions taken now. If the industry adjusts to the new reality, the sector can remain profitable, stabilise revenue and sustain national development. If it resists change, the price we see today may serve as a benchmark for years.

The market has not rejected diamonds. It has changed the terms. Namibia must now respond on those terms — clearly, directly and without delay.

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