Zimbabwe is pushing ahead with ambitious diamond production targets despite weakening global demand and mounting pressure on rough diamond prices.
State-owned Zimbabwe Consolidated Diamond Company (ZCDC), owned by Mutapa Investment Fund, plans to produce 5 million carats in 2026 — approximately 1.2 million carats more than the country produced in 2025.
If achieved, the target would represent the strongest annual diamond output in Zimbabwe’s history and signal Harare’s belief that higher volumes and operational efficiency can partially offset worsening market conditions.
According to comments attributed to ZCDC chief executive Douglas Zimbango, the company has produced approximately 26.5 million carats since operations began in 2016.
The new production target arrives during one of the most challenging periods for the global diamond industry in years.
International rough diamond prices have weakened significantly amid slowing luxury demand, tighter consumer spending and growing competition from lab-grown diamonds. Zimbabwe’s rough stones have come under even greater pressure, trading at substantial discounts to higher-quality global benchmarks.
Zimbango said Zimbabwean rough diamond prices have reportedly fallen to around $22 per carat from significantly higher levels previously. He attributed the decline to a combination of:
Munashe Shava Zimbango also acknowledged that Zimbabwean rough continues to trade at a significant discount compared with international peers, reflecting both quality differentials and investor concerns around governance, traceability and market confidence.
Recent sales figures highlight the scale of the challenge facing the sector.
During the first quarter of 2026, Zimbabwe sold approximately 784,764 carats of diamonds. Sales volumes declined 11% year-on-year, while total sales value dropped 29% to around $21.6 million.
The decline suggests that falling realised prices are eroding revenues faster than increased production volumes can compensate, placing growing pressure on profitability across the industry.
The pricing weakness also underscores broader structural concerns around diamond marketing systems, international buyer confidence and downstream value capture.
The government’s push for higher output forms part of a wider restructuring of state mining assets under Mutapa Investment Fund.
For investors, future sentiment will depend less on production volumes alone and more on whether Zimbabwe can successfully modernise governance, strengthen market confidence and reposition its rough diamonds within an increasingly competitive global market.
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