DRC Gold Trading S.A., a state-owned company specializing in the purchase, trading and export of artisanal gold, announced on Feb. 10, 2026 that it has opened a branch in Lubumbashi, marking its entry into Haut-Katanga province.
The move aims to bring artisanal gold production from the province into official channels. A few days after opening the Lubumbashi office, the company collected and exported its first batch of more than 20 kilograms of artisanal gold from Haut-Katanga through formal traceability procedures. At the 2025 average gold price, the shipment is worth more than $2 million.
Haut-Katanga, long dominated by copper and cobalt production, has also seen artisanal gold mining activity in the town of Kilolo, in Kipushi territory. However, this output has not been reflected in official export statistics, with most production reportedly leaving the country through illicit channels.
A 2024 United Nations report described artisanal gold mining in the area as extensive, pointing to significant production circulating outside formal supply chains. The opening of a purchasing office is intended to integrate this output into a regulated traceability and export framework.
In the same statement, DRC Gold Trading said it had also opened a second purchasing office in Haut-Uele province, in the mining town of Durba, after initially establishing operations there in 2025. During the first half of 2025, the company exported 12,511 kilograms of gold from that branch.
The Durba office has strong supply potential. According to a Dec. 8, 2025 report by the International Peace Information Service (IPIS), researchers identified nearly 5,500 artisanal miners operating across 18 gold sites around Durba.
The expansion into Haut-Katanga and Haut-Uele forms part of the company’s plan to operate ten sites nationwide, targeting annual volumes of 15 to 18 tonnes of artisanal gold and more than $2.6 billion in export revenue. Two additional branches are planned for 2026 in Kinshasa and Mbuji-Mayi.
According to the World Gold Council, the average annual gold price rose 44% to $110,280 per kilogram in 2025, driven by strong demand and a geopolitical and financial environment supportive of the precious metal. The upward trend is expected to continue in 2026. Gold traded above $160,000 per kilogram in January, while Deutsche Bank, UBS and JP Morgan project prices could exceed $190,000 per kilogram by year-end.
Timothée Manoke









