Culture
Key Facts
—The launch. On May 22, 2026, Guyana unveiled a national gold and jewellery brand called Eldorado Reimagined.
—The medallion. A limited-edition coin struck in one troy ounce of .999 fine gold, mined, refined, designed and minted entirely in Guyana.
—The timing. Deliberately tied to the country’s 60th Independence Anniversary, its Diamond Jubilee.
—The pivot. A push to move from exporting raw gold to making finished, branded jewellery at home.
—The partners. Built with the Guyana Jewellers Association and the Guyana Mining School.
—For residents. The commemorative coin can be pre-ordered through an official state portal.
The Eldorado Reimagined brand is Guyana’s bet that Guyana gold can stop leaving as raw metal and start selling the world finished, made-in-Guyana jewellery instead.
For five centuries the word Eldorado has meant a city of gold that Europeans chased through these forests and never found. On the evening of May 22, 2026, the government of Guyana borrowed the legend back and turned it into a trademark.
In Georgetown, before ministers, miners, jewellers and the diplomatic corps, the Ministry of Natural Resources launched what it calls the country’s first unified national gold and jewellery brand. The name is Eldorado Reimagined, and the idea behind it is blunt.
Guyana digs up a great deal of gold and sells almost all of it raw. The brand is an attempt to keep more of that value at home by turning the metal into finished goods that carry a Guyanese name.
A coin made start to finish at home
The centrepiece of the evening was a small object with a large claim attached. The government unveiled Guyana’s first-ever Independence commemorative gold medallion, and stressed one detail above all others.
The gold was mined in Guyana, refined in Guyana, designed in Guyana and, for the first time, minted in Guyana too. According to the official statement from the Ministry of Natural Resources, the piece was struck in one troy ounce of .999 fine gold using one hundred percent locally sourced metal.
Each medallion carries its own serial number and was issued as a limited edition to mark the Diamond Jubilee. Natural Resources Minister Vickram Bharrat called it a national artefact rather than a souvenir.
“This medallion is not simply a collectible,” he said. “It is a symbol of Guyana’s progress and advancements in the sector.”
Why a small country wants its own Guyana gold brand
President Irfaan Ali framed the launch as something bigger than marketing. He told the room it was about who controls the story of Guyanese gold, and who profits from it.
“Tonight represents more than the launch of a brand,” he said. “It represents Guyana taking ownership of its story, its resources, and its future.”
For generations, he added, the country’s gold had left these shores as a raw commodity, earning the country little beyond the spot price.
The economic logic is the same one that drives every commodity producer that grows tired of selling cheap and buying back dear. A bar of raw gold earns the spot price and nothing more.
A finished ring or a serial-numbered coin can earn a premium for design, craft and provenance. Capturing that gap is the whole point of moving, in the official phrase, from extraction to value creation.
It is also a familiar move for Guyana right now, and gold is the next raw export the country wants to dress up before it leaves.
The same government has been pushing American partners to build an alumina refinery rather than ship bauxite ore abroad, and pressing oil firms to pay local workers more, as our report on the proposed Berbice refinery set out.
Who builds it, and who can buy it
The brand was not launched in isolation. The Ministry of Natural Resources built it alongside the Guyana Jewellers Association, whose members showed their work at an exhibition on the night.
The association’s vice chairman, Vead Persaud, described the partnership as a step toward a more organised local trade. He said the launch gave Guyanese jewellers a platform to show their craft alongside a national project.
The Guyana Mining School also took part, presenting young talent as the future of the country’s jewellery and technical work. The detail matters because a brand without trained craftspeople behind it is only a logo.
For foreign residents and the wider diaspora, there is a practical hook. The commemorative medallion can be pre-ordered through an official state portal, turning a policy launch into something a buyer can actually hold.
A brand is easier to launch than to build
The harder test comes after the speeches. Guyana is trying to graft a craft industry onto an economy that has spent years dazzled by offshore oil, and skilled jewellery manufacturing is not built in a single evening.
There is a wider pattern here too, with a country flush with oil money racing to spread that wealth into roads, refineries and now workshops, a theme running through our coverage of the Georgetown trade corridor.
The bet is the same one every oil state makes and few win: that finished goods outlast the crude.
For now, Eldorado Reimagined is a statement of intent wrapped around one beautifully made coin. Whether it becomes an industry depends on what gets minted after the jubilee lights come down.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Eldorado Reimagined?
It is Guyana’s first national gold and jewellery brand, launched by the Ministry of Natural Resources on May 22, 2026. The aim is to move the country from exporting raw gold toward making and selling finished, branded jewellery at home.
What makes the Independence gold medallion special?
It is the first commemorative coin mined, refined, designed and minted entirely within Guyana. It was struck in one troy ounce of .999 fine gold, carries an individual serial number, and was issued as a limited edition for the 60th Independence Anniversary.
Why does the Guyana gold brand matter economically?
Selling raw gold earns only the market price for the metal. Finished jewellery can command a premium for design and craft, so keeping that step at home lets more of the value stay in Guyana rather than flowing to refiners and makers abroad.
Can the public buy the medallion?
Yes. The limited-edition medallion can be pre-ordered through an official Guyanese state portal, which makes it accessible to residents, collectors and members of the diaspora.
Connected Coverage above links to related Rio Times reporting on Guyana’s economy.
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