- CIBJO
The CIBJO (Confédération Internationale de la Bijouterie, Joaillerie et Orfèvrerie), also known as the World Jewellery Confederation, is an international confederation of
jewellery ,gemstone ,horology , andsilverware trade organisations. Its primary purpose is as a decision-making body, to create and maintain standards and promote cooperation within these interconnected organisations; it seeks to cement nomenclature and setbest practice guidelines to better engenderconsumer confidence . Originally aEurope an confederation, the CIBJO was founded in 1926 under the name BIBOA. It later expanded to become the CIBJO in 1961, and now includes representatives of 36 countries; the CIBJO was renamed the World Jewellery Confederation in 2000, but still appears to retain its former name. It is headquartered inLondon ,England and its current president is Gaetano Cavalieri.The CIBJO's operations include the development of the "
Blue Book ", a three-part publication outlining terminology, classification, and ethical guidelines (i.e., disclosure of treatments and synthetics) for coloured gemstones,diamond s, andpearl s. Each part is coordinated by a separate commission. Similarly, the [http://www.cibjo.org/ CIBJO]Laboratory Commission (CLC), founded in the 1990s, seeks to harmonise standards used by gemmological laboratories—it has met limited success, but has the support of major laboratories such as those of theGemological Institute of America andGemmological Association of Great Britain . Among other functions, the CLC inspects and registersdiamond master set s (sets of differently-tinted diamonds orcubic zirconia used for colour grading) and setsdiamond grading policy for its member labs.As of December 2004, the CLC is working with the
Laboratory Manual Harmonisation Committee (LMHC; a committee of independent gemmologists) to develop a technical manual outlining the description of coloured stones and the disclosure of their treatments. Cooperation with theInternational Organization for Standardization (ISO) is also sought by the CIBJO. The guidelines published by the CIBJO have been used in several court rulings; in a recent (December 2004) example, aMunich district court ordered the German distributor ofGemesis Corporation—a producer of gem-qualitysynthetic diamond —to cease describing their product as "cultured", based on the "Blue Book"'s guidelines on misleading terminology.Policy is discussed and decided during the annual CIBJO Congress, a four-day conference of trade leaders held in a different city each year. The 2005 Congress was held in
Hong Kong fromMarch 4 –March 7 ; the 2006 Congress is scheduled to be held inVancouver ,Canada .Listed Cibjo Laboratories world wide
AustraliaDiamond Certification Laboratory of Australia [http://www.dcla.com.au/ DCLA]
AustriaÖsterreichische Gemmologische Gesellschaft (ÖGEMG) BrazilInstituto Brasileiro de Gemas e Metais Preciosos (IBGM) ChinaBG Gemological Institute
FranceLaboratoire Français de Gemmologie de la C.C .I.P.
GermanyDDI Deutsches Diamant Institut (Diamonds) Deutsches Edelstein Tesinstitut Hong KongHong Kong Jade & Stone Laboratory Ltd India Gemmological Institute of India
Italy CISGEM Japan Japan Jewellery Association
The Netherlands Nederlands Edelsteen Laboratorium (Netherlands Gemmological Laboratory) SpainCol.legi Oficial de Joiers, d'Orfebres, de Rellotgers i de Gemmòlegs de Catalunya (JORGC) Instituto Gemológico Español (IGE)
Switzerland [http://www.ssef.ch/ SSEF] Swiss Gemmological Institute Thailand Gemmological Testing Laboratory of the Gem & Jewelry Institute of Thailand (GIT) United Arab EmiratesDubai Central Laboratory United Kingdom [http://www.gem-a.info/ GAGTL] Gem Testing Laboratory Gemmological Association
United States of America [http://www.igiworldwide.com/ IGI] - USA
External links
*http://www.cibjo.org - Official site
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