March/April 2007
CS Home

About Colored Stone

Advertising Information
Archived Articles and News
Classifieds

Inside the Industry - Links and Information

News & Updates
Products & Resources
Search Products and Dealers
Show Calendar
Subscribe to Colored Stone

What's Happening?


May/June 2008
This month's issue

Subscribe to Colored Stone!
Contact Customer Service


Thais, Japanese Announce Deal on Beryllium Sapphire

The Thai Gem and Jewelry Traders Association (TGJTA) and the Japan Jewelry Association (JJA) announced at the recent World Jewellery Confederation (CIBJO) congress that they had come to an agreement on disclosure of beryllium-treated corundum.

The agreement was hammered out prior to the congress during meetings in Bangkok, Thailand. Relations between Thai gem dealers and Japanese gem buyers soured several years ago when large quantities of “padparadscha,” or orange-pink, sapphires began to enter the market. The color is extremely rare in nature, and very popular in Japan. When these sapphires were first sold, they were disclosed simply as “heated,” generally considered an acceptable treatment. Japanese wholesalers bought large quantities of them, only to discover later that the color was due to beryllium diffusion, a type of treatment considered unacceptable.

Thailand’s sapphire exports to Japan plummeted, and the Japanese market for sapphire shrank due to low consumer confidence. A nationwide sapphire promotion – originally to be jointly sponsored by the TJGTA and the JJA – was postponed indefinitely.

Under the new agreement, a memorandum of understanding, Thai companies exporting corundum to Japan must include the following disclosure on their invoices: “Non-Beryllium-Treated,” “Beryllium Treated,” and “Unconfirmed Beryllium Treatment.”

The disclosure rules will apply to both loose gemstones and gems set in jewelry. Any Thai exporter found to be selling a beryllium-treated gemstone must accept the return of the stone and issue a full refund.

It was agreed that enforcement of the rules would be governed by the TGJTA in Thailand and the JJA in Japan, and that the rules would also apply to JJA members in domestic transactions.

The memorandum of understanding was negotiated between the JJA and the TGJTA, the Thai Department of Export Promotion, the Gem and Jewelry Institute of Thailand, and the Chanthaburi Gem and Jewelry Traders Association. Chanthaburi is the second-largest gem trading center in Thailand, and is also the place where the beryllium-treated sapphire first originated.

Posted: March 21, 2007

 

 

March/April 2007
Considering CAD
A Bull in China

News & Updates
In This Issue

Visit the Vegas Show Guide

 

Subscribe to Colored Stone Today and Save!


Colored Stone
One year (6 issues)
Only $29.95

Industry buyers and decision-makers all over the world rely on Colored Stone's extensive trade coverage for the latest information in the gem field. Colored Stone delivers up-to-the minute news on the gemstone trade, no matter where on the globe it's happening.

PLUS receive the Tucson Show Guide FREE! A must-have 500+ page annual guide incides all major trade show locations, exhibitor lists, and so much more. Also include is the largest directory of supplies and products that you'll want to refer to all year long. Don't go to the show without it. (TSG mails at the end of December).

Start a new subscription or give a gift at the same great price!

Subscribe! Give a Gift Subscription!
____________________
Colored Stone Home

e-mail the editors of Colored Stone | About Colored Stone

subscribe to Colored Stone | subscription customer service

This site and all of its contents are copyright Colored Stone and Interweave Press unless otherwise noted.
All articles, photographs, graphics, logos, and trade show floorplans are owned by Colored Stone and may not be reproduced in any form,
in print or in electronic media, without the express written permission of the publisher. Violators will be subject to legal action.


Copyright 2008. Colored Stone/Interweave Press. All rights reserved.