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Diamond miner De Beers returns to Angola after ten-year absence

Published by Jessica Weisman-Pitts

Posted on April 20, 2022

2 min read

· Last updated: February 7, 2026

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Close-up of diamonds displayed, symbolizing De Beers' return to Angola - Global Banking & Finance Review
The image features diamonds showcased at De Beers Global Sightholder Sales, highlighting the company's return to Angola after a decade. This marks a significant development in the global diamond mining sector.
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LUANDA (Reuters) -Diamond miner De Beers has signed two mineral investment contracts with the Angolan government, the Anglo American subsidiary said on Wednesday, in a return to the southern African country it left in 2012. The contracts, for licence areas in the northeast, are for 35 years and give De Beers the rights to explore […]

LUANDA (Reuters) -Diamond miner De Beers has signed two mineral investment contracts with the Angolan government, the Anglo American subsidiary said on Wednesday, in a return to the southern African country it left in 2012.

The contracts, for licence areas in the northeast, are for 35 years and give De Beers the rights to explore and mine, through two new joint ventures with Angola’s state diamond company Endiama.

De Beers will hold 90% of the new joint ventures and Endiama will hold 10% initially but can increase its equity share over time, Angola’s oil and natural resources minister Diamantino Azevedo said at a ceremony in the capital, Luanda.

“De Beers’ return to Angola marks an important moment for the country and for the global mining sector,” Azevedo said.

De Beers previously explored for diamonds in Angola between 2005 and 2012 but concluded that a stand-alone deposit in the area was not economic and relinquished its concession.

Angola was the seventh biggest producer of rough diamonds in the world in 2020, according to Kimberley Process statistics. Western sanctions on the world’s biggest diamond producer, Russia, could boost demand for alternative sources of diamonds.

De Beers expects to start exploration activities in the licences this year, pending regulatory approvals. The company announced in December last year that it had applied to conduct exploration activities in the country.

“Angola has worked hard in recent years to create a stable and attractive investment environment and we are pleased to be returning to active exploration in the country,” De Beers CEO Bruce Cleaver said in a statement.

In a sign of commitment to greater transparency, earlier this month Angola applied to join the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, a body through which countries report publicly on government revenues from mining and oil.

(Reporting by Miguel Gomes in Luanda and Helen Reid in Johannesburg, Editing by Louise Heavens, Edmund Blair and Barbara Lewis)

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a joint venture?
A joint venture is a business arrangement where two or more parties agree to pool their resources for a specific project or business activity, sharing both the risks and profits.
What is diamond mining?
Diamond mining is the process of extracting diamonds from the earth, typically through open-pit or underground mining methods, to be processed and sold in various markets.
What is the Kimberley Process?
The Kimberley Process is an international certification scheme aimed at preventing the trade of conflict diamonds, ensuring that diamonds are sourced from legitimate and ethical operations.

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