As part of an initiative to boost its global muscle, CIBJO, the International
Jewellery Confederation, has made uniform international standards for
flawless diamonds.
The policy, outlined in CIBJO’s Diamond Book, aims to eliminate
discrepancies in diamond grading across international borders. The initiative by
CIBJO, a trade organization representing 21 countries around the world, adopts
the definition previously used by both the Gemological Institute of America and
the Federal Trade Commission. It makes stricter definitions used by several
European labs.
The definition is included in CIBJO’s standardized clarity/purity scale,
which requires that diamonds be "examined by an experienced professional
under 10-power magnification in normal light by means of an achromatic,
aplanatic lens."
Flawless diamonds, according to this standardized scale, must be found
"absolutely transparent and free from inclusions" under this 10-power
magnification.
The move by CIBJO illustrates the organization’s move toward greater
international presence. Formerly known primarily as a European organization,
CIBJO has been increasing its U.S. strength for several years and, in May voted
to move the organization’s general secretariat to the United States. In the
process, well-known U.S. industry leader Matt Runci, executive director
of Jewelers of America, was appointed to replace former Secretary General Jack
Ogden.
Until March 2001, Runci will lead CIBJO in conjunction with the organization’s
current president, fellow American Jose Hess. In March, CIBJO
President-Elect Gaetano Cavalieri assumes his new position.
"One of my many goals is to raise the visibility of CIBJO to both the
jewelry industry and to the public, in every country around the world,"
Cavalieri said.