Editor’s Note
This article examines the subdued pre-Diwali season in Surat, the global hub for diamond polishing. Despite the festival’s traditional association with jewellery purchases, the industry faces significant headwinds from weak international demand.

Diwali, the festival that typically sees a boost in purchases of precious stones and jewellery, is almost here. However, it seems the festival of light is unable to eradicate the darkness prevalent in Surat’s famous diamond industry.
The sector, which accounts for the cutting and polishing of 80 per cent of the world’s rough diamonds, has not witnessed any significant rise in sales ahead of one of India’s most prominent festivities this year.
With international demand plummeting after the US imposed steep tariffs, traders had pinned their hopes on the less expensive lab-grown diamonds (LGD) and a surge in the domestic market ahead of the festive season. But even those possibilities have looked dim, leaving an already distressed diamond industry in the lurch.
Diamond traders have received less than 50 per cent of the usual order of cut-and-polished diamonds from the US — the largest market for Surat diamonds — since the Donald Trump administration implemented the high tariff plan in August.
As per data released by the Surat Diamond Association (SDA), while cut-and-polished diamonds worth Rs 13.58 billion were exported in 2022-23, the figure plunged to Rs 4.9 billion in 2024-25.
Kanani further explained that there are two processes to make synthetic diamonds — Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) and High Pressure High Temperature (HPHT).
Since the imposition of tariffs by the US administration in August, more than one lakh jobs have already vanished in Surat’s diamond sector.
He said that since the HPHT set-up is cheaper, most of the medium traders decided to switch to it to produce LGD. However, it has not brought them any relief as the sales so far have not been enough to even compensate for the new setup and the cost of training the workers, Kanani added.
The overall sentiment in Surat’s diamond industry remains one of despair, with the festive season failing to deliver the anticipated sparkle.