Facebook Bankable LinkedIn Bankable
Twitter Bankable WhatsApp Bankable
Bankable
Bankable

MOST READ

African Economies

DRC, Mole Group Sign PPP for Agro-Industrial Project Estimated at $1 Bln

DRC, Mole Group Sign PPP for Agro-Industrial Project Estimated at $1 Bln

Swiss agricultural commodity trader Mole Group signed a Public-Private Partnership (PPP) with the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) on Sept. 30, 2025, for a vast agro-industrial project in Mbanza-Ngungu, Kongo Central province. The contract was signed by Mole Group Director General Grandi Mole and Agriculture Minister Muhindo Nzangi Butondo.

The agreement, expected for about one year now, is expected to complete the project’s structuring phase. Partners include Swiss firm Bühler, a specialist in agro-industrial machinery, and Belgian company De Smet Engineers & Contractors, known for turnkey plant construction. International financiers are also expected to join.

Mole said that secondary studies, to be carried out with the United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO), will begin in October 2025. Construction is scheduled to start in the third quarter of 2026 and will take four years.

The project covers more than 105,000 hectares, including 85,000 cultivable, and will require about $1 billion in investment. Plans call for an agro-industrial park with modern infrastructure: communication towers, hangars, warehouses, silos, processing plants, and administrative offices. It will also include schools and phytosanitary laboratories.

Annual production targets stand at 650,000 tons of food products: 70,000 tons of wheat flour, 150,000 tons of sugar, 150,000 tons of corn flour, 20,000 tons of rice, and 260,000 tons of cassava flour. Local raw materials such as cassava, maize, wheat, rice, and sugarcane will be transformed into flour, refined sugar and ethanol.

Mole Group expects the initiative to generate more than 20,000 direct and indirect jobs, stimulating the rural economy. If achieved, it would mark a step toward reducing the DRC’s chronic food deficit and dependence on imports. According to the Central Bank of Congo, food imports cost the country nearly $1.79 billion annually between 2019 and 2023.

Ronsard Luabeya

Subscribe to our newsletter (free)

Receive daily news and analyses from the Bankable editorial team.

 
 
drc-government-gives-private-employment-agencies-30-days-to-comply-with-labor-laws
Highlights • Minister of Employment Ferdinand Massamba wa Massamba sets 30-day deadline for compliance.• Agencies without updated authorization risk...
drc-s-new-mining-minister-takes-humble-approach-to-sector-s-complex-challenges
Highlights:  • Louis Watum Kabamba, former Gécamines engineer and ex-Ivanhoe Mines DRC chief, becomes Mining Minister with industry backing • New...
drc-considers-adopting-us-soil-technology-to-halve-road-construction-costs
Rural Development Minister visits the pilot site where the American technology is used.  US-developed soil stabilization technology costs...
dr-congo-emirati-conglomerate-irh-installs-board-directors-at-alphamin-resources
UAE's International Resources Holding appoints two directors to Alphamin board following 56% stake acquisition Ziad Mikhael and Salman Bhatti...

African Economies

MOST READ

Please publish modules in offcanvas position.