Steep Rise in De Beers Rough Production
May 03, 26
(IDEX Online) - De Beers says rough diamond production increased by 17% in the first three months of 2026, to 7.1 million carats.
The increase was largely driven by the release of stockpiled ore at Gahcho Kue, in Canada, (up 163%) and higher underground volumes at Venetia in South Africa (up 53%).
The loss-making miner said, however, that trading conditions remained "challenged" due to ongoing industry, geopolitical and tariff headwinds.
Rough sales at the two sights held during the quarter saw revenue rise, year-on-year by almost 25% to $648 million, although average per carat prices fell 19% to $101.
Production guidance for 2026 remains unchanged at 21-26 million carats, the company said in its Production Report for the First Quarter of 2026, published on 28 April.
Actual rough production was 24.7 million carats in 2024 and 21.7 million carats in 2025.
Botswana, which accounts for more than two thirds of all De Beers' diamonds, saw production rise by 5% year-on-year during Q1 2026.
There was a 12% drop in Namibia, due to scheduled maintenance on two vessels at Debmarine Namibia and the of decommissioning two vessels.
There was 53% production rise in South Africa, largely due to increased processing of underground ore from Venetia, and a 163% increase in Canada due to the planned release of ore from a new area of Gahcho Kue.
Pic, courtesy De Beers, show the processing plant at Gahcho Kue.