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Coronavirus drives De Beers to shift diamond viewings from Botswana

FILE PHOTO: Diamonds are displayed during a visit to the De Beers Global Sightholder Sales (GSS) in Gaborone, Botswana

By Brian Benza

GABORONE (Reuters) - Global diamond giant, De Beers is working with Botswana's government to temporarily move viewings to places closer to international diamond centres, with sales still recorded in the country, to try to restart trading hit by coronavirus travel restrictions.

Anglo American <AAL.L> unit De Beers sells 90 percent of its total supply from Gaborone, capital of Botswana, whose economy relies on diamonds.

But since the coronavirus pandemic, diamond buyers from traditional centres, such as Antwerp and Mumbai, have been unable to travel to Botswana, which they previously visited ten times a year to view and buy diamonds.

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"If we can move our product closer to them it would give us the flexibility to restart sales as soon as the markets reopen," De Beers Executive Vice President, Diamond Trading, Paul Rowley told a media briefing Thursday.

De Beers said it will move some goods to locations closer to international diamond centres only for viewings with sales, known as sights, still invoiced in Botswana.

"The temporary measure will enable us and our government partners to generate some revenue in this difficult period."

The two-month coronavirus lockdown in Belgium halted business in Antwerp, the world's largest diamond trade centre. Antwerp reopened at the start of this month.

Movement restrictions and weaker demand forced De Beers to cancel its diamond sales, known as sights, in April and May after the February sale declined by 36 percent to $551 million (447 million pounds).

De Beers, which gets 70 percent of its production from Botswana, is curbing output. It has revised downwards its 2020 production guidance by 7 million carats to between 25 and 27 million carats.

Botswana has a low number of coronavirus infections with 35 cases recorded and one death.

However, the economy has been severely impacted by the outbreak with the budget deficit expected to more than double as reduced diamond sales and exports impact revenues.

(This story corrects headline and paragraphs 1 to show only viewings of diamonds to be relocated and not sales. Adds paragraph 5 to clarify.)

(Reporting by Brian Benza; editing by Barbara Lewis)