RUSSIA'S ALROSA PRODUCES 'UNIQUE' DIAMOND
February 12, 2013 - 15:40 AMT
PanARMENIAN.Net - Russia's diamond-mining giant Alrosa has produced a
'unique' diamond weighing 145.44 carats, the company announced in a
statement Tuesday, Feb 12, RIA Novosti reported.
According to specialists at Alrosa's Diamond-Sorting Center, the gem
could fetch up to $1 million.
The diamond, discovered late last month in Russia's coldest region,
Yakutia, measures 35x20x26 mm and is octahedral in shape, the company
said. It is clear with a yellowish hue.
Last September, Alrosa found an even larger, gem-grade diamond at
another of its Yakutia mines, which it valued at more than $1.5
million and said could be split into several high-quality cut diamonds.
The latest find comes from deep within the Yubileynaya diamond pipe at
Factory No. 14 of Alrosa's Aykhalsky mining facility. In October, the
same pipe yielded an enormous industrial-grade diamond weighing 888.15
carats. That crystal, unclear and grayish-green in hue, was said by
the company to be the fourth-heaviest diamond ever produced in Russia.
Russia has the largest known diamond deposits in the world and Alrosa
accounts for 97 percent of the country's production. The principal
regions of production are Yakutia, also known as the Sakha Republic,
Perm and Arkhangelsk.
Alrosa accounts for 25 percent of the world's diamond production.
In 2011, the company produced 34.6 million carats of diamonds and
sold $4.45 billion worth of its product. Figures for 2012, not yet
fully calculated, were expected to total about 34.4 million carats
and $4.5 billion.
February 12, 2013 - 15:40 AMT
PanARMENIAN.Net - Russia's diamond-mining giant Alrosa has produced a
'unique' diamond weighing 145.44 carats, the company announced in a
statement Tuesday, Feb 12, RIA Novosti reported.
According to specialists at Alrosa's Diamond-Sorting Center, the gem
could fetch up to $1 million.
The diamond, discovered late last month in Russia's coldest region,
Yakutia, measures 35x20x26 mm and is octahedral in shape, the company
said. It is clear with a yellowish hue.
Last September, Alrosa found an even larger, gem-grade diamond at
another of its Yakutia mines, which it valued at more than $1.5
million and said could be split into several high-quality cut diamonds.
The latest find comes from deep within the Yubileynaya diamond pipe at
Factory No. 14 of Alrosa's Aykhalsky mining facility. In October, the
same pipe yielded an enormous industrial-grade diamond weighing 888.15
carats. That crystal, unclear and grayish-green in hue, was said by
the company to be the fourth-heaviest diamond ever produced in Russia.
Russia has the largest known diamond deposits in the world and Alrosa
accounts for 97 percent of the country's production. The principal
regions of production are Yakutia, also known as the Sakha Republic,
Perm and Arkhangelsk.
Alrosa accounts for 25 percent of the world's diamond production.
In 2011, the company produced 34.6 million carats of diamonds and
sold $4.45 billion worth of its product. Figures for 2012, not yet
fully calculated, were expected to total about 34.4 million carats
and $4.5 billion.