100.1 GO FM - We're Your Feel Good Pop Station

New diamond producing company set to conduct business in the NWT

Diamonds de Canada has been approved as an Approved NWT Diamond Manufacturer, allowing them to use NWT rough diamonds in their manufacturing process.

A condition of the approval is that the company does the processing of NWT diamonds, which includes cutting and polishing the stones, in territory.

“The history and love of diamonds in the NWT is woven into the fabric of this amazing community,” Benjamin King, Interim CEO for Diamonds de Canada, said in a statement.

“With the right technological solutions coupled with the polishing talent in Yellowknife, there is an opportunity to showcase the best rough diamonds in the world and work them into polished diamonds.”

The company says they will hire and train NWT residents to work in the manufacturing process. The company uses automated cutting machines in the process. They are also working with local artists to design 

There is currently one other approved manufacturer working in the NWT, Almod Diamonds.

Finance Minister Caroline Wawzonek said diversifying the NWT’s diamond industry to include more manufacturing businesses will help boost the territory’s economy.

““As the GNWT’s diamond industry continues to diversify into the manufacturing of diamonds, residents will be exposed to new training and job opportunities that will strengthen their communities and the territory as whole. 

The mining sector has been hard hit by the pandemic, with the international market severely declining and costs rising due to COVID-19 restrictions.

This has impacted the GNWT’s revenues, as the industry declined, which severely cut back the royalties they received from mining companies.

Initial estimates in the 2020-21 budget forecasted $30.7 million in royalties from mining in 2020, but the revised budget forecasted the GNWT would receive no royalties. The numbers in 2021-22 are only slightly higher, with the GNWT anticipating $1.5 million in royalties from mining companies.

Bailey Moreton
Bailey Moreton
Bailey is new to the north, arriving from Ottawa where he studied journalism at Carleton University. He has worked for newspapers in Halifax, Windsor, and Ottawa. He came to the north hoping to see polar bears. He will settle for a bison. If you have a tip, send it to 905 252-9781, or [email protected].

Continue Reading

You may also like



cjcd Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Minister Wawzonek says “good news coming from North” post Trump talk

“I think all Canadians are probably concerned about it to a degree,” says Northwest Territories Infrastructure Minister and Deputy Premier Caroline Wawzonek, who adds that while any formal response to recent threats from the U.S. to annex Canada will come from the feds, it's an important time for everyone across the North to “assert sovereignty.” By “positioning the North to be economically strong” this will also benefit the rest of the country, said Minister Wawzonek.

École William McDonald and N.J. Macpherson School in clear, say officials

The Office of the Chief Public Health Officer issued an announcement today that Health Orders placed at École William McDonald Middle School and N.J. Macpherson School last year have been lifted. Officials reported that the lead levels at the schools no longer exceed Health Canada guidelines.

GNWT says it’s time to “rename” sites to reflect YK culture and history

The renaming may be a reflection of a changing landscape in the city. With more development coming North, Indigenous leaders and allies are taking part in a growing dialogue of honouring and acknowledging living histories that go trace back to time immemorial. The issue of renaming has become a hot topic for Yellowknifers from streets on the city’s landscape like Franklin Ave to waterbodies like the Great Slave Lake.

Missing Persons Act comes into force

The Missing Persons Act, a new piece of legislation that aims to assist police in investigating missing persons in the Northwest Territories, has come into force.

Yellowknife and NSMA sign memorandum on copper recycling

North Slave Métis Alliance (NSMA) and the City of Yellowknife signed a Memorandum of Understanding today regarding the collection, processing, and recycling of waste copper.