Lucara Diamond Corp. is a
diamond exploration and mining company, founded in 2009 by two Canadian mining executives, Eira Thomas, Catherine McLeod-Seltzer and Swedish-Canadian mining billionaire
Lukas Lundin,[2] operating in Southern Africa[3][4] but established in Canada.[5] In November 2015,
Lesedi La Rona, the world's second largest gem-quality diamond ever found, was found at the Karowe mine in Botswana.
Operations
Lucara owned a 40% share of the
AK6kimberlite project (now the Karowe mine) in Botswana. In October 2010, Lucara bought African Diamonds, giving it a 100% share in the mine.[6] The mine has an estimated $US2.2 billion of diamonds.[7]AK6 is in the
Orapa/
Letlhakane district.[8]
Other operations include the
Mothae diamond project in
Lesotho, where
kimberlite processing began in June 2010,[9] and where a 53.5 carat diamond has already been discovered;[10] the
Kavango project in Namibia;[11] and planned mines and applications for mining licenses in Zimbabwe, Cameroon, and Botswana.[12]
Noted stones
On 18November 2015, the company announced the discovery of the
Lesedi La Rona, the world's second largest gem-quality diamond ever (second only to the 3,106 carat
Cullinan).[13] The type IIa diamond[14] was found in the company's Karowe mine in north-central Botswana. The diamond weighs 1,111
carat and measures 65 by 56 by 40 mm (2.6 by 2.2 by 1.6 in). A day later, two more diamonds weighing 813 and 374 carat, were also found.[15] All the stones came from the AK6 pipe opened 18 months earlier, it has since yielded over 1 million carats of diamonds.[16] The company has sold the 813 carat Constellation in May 2016 for $63.1 million [17] and a 341.9 carat diamond in July 2015 for $20.6 million.[18] The Lesedi has since sold for $53 million.[19]
Company structure
Chairman of the board since 2010 is
Lukas Lundin, son of
Adolf H. Lundin the founder of
Lundin Mining and
Lundin Petroleum. The president and CEO of Lucara is Eira Thomas.[20][21] As of January 2020 over half of the company's executives, in Botswana and around the world, were women.[2]
In March 2011, Lucara was reported to be discussing a merger with
Gem Diamonds.[22]
After the discovery of the Lesedi La Rona, the company's shares went up 28%.[23]