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A reform of tax breaks on imports of refined petroleum products boosted Democratic Republic of Congo revenue in 2025, the finance ministry said.

In a Jan. 20 statement, the ministry said oil-related receipts jumped nearly 1,700% after the government scrapped exemptions for mining companies and their subcontractors in late July.

It said monthly revenue rose from an average 4.43 billion Congolese francs ($2 million) between January and July 2025 to 78.5 billion francs ($36 million) between August and December 2025. Total receipts for the year reached 423.6 billion francs ($194 million).

Thanks to this coordinated reform, the DGDA significantly increased revenue collection, reaching 6,848 billion Congolese francs ($3.13 billion) at the end of December 2025, compared with 6,280 billion Congolese francs ($2.87 billion) budgeted in the 2025 Treasury Plan (PTR),” the ministry said, exceeding the target by 9%.

The ministry said fuel tax breaks totalled $1.6 billion in 2022 and $1.1 billion in 2023, equivalent to an average 15% of state revenue over the two fiscal years. It said the scale of subsidies, exemptions and preferential tax treatment had significantly reduced public resources, prompting the government to overhaul tax breaks on petroleum product imports.

Under Article 22 of the 2025 finance law, the government removed subsidies and exemptions from import duties and taxes, including customs duties and VAT, for fuels used in mining operations or sold to mining companies and their subcontractors. The measure covered products including gasoline, kerosene, diesel, fuel oil, lamp oil and LPG.

The decision was implemented through an inter-ministerial decree signed on May 2, 2025, by the ministries of National Economy, Finance and Hydrocarbons.

The reform took effect in late July 2025 with the publication of a new pricing schedule for fuels sold to the mining sector, mainly in the country’s southern and eastern regions. At the same time, the finance ministry suspended certain import exemptions, while the hydrocarbons ministry stepped up inspections and fuel tracking operations.

Boaz Kabeya

Posted On jeudi, 22 janvier 2026 18:52 Written by

Lualaba Governor Fifi Masuka Saini announced on Jan. 19, 2026, the signing of 16 agreements between the provincial government and Emirati companies at the Kolwezi Congress Village. These documents cover several sectors, including agriculture, mining, health, infrastructure, and tourism.

According to the governor, these partnerships aim to create mutually beneficial collaborations. They are part of President Félix Tshisekedi’s vision for tangible development for the benefit of local communities. At this stage, further details on the content of the documents and the identity of the companies involved are not yet available.

Since 2025, the United Arab Emirates has shown a growing interest in the DRC, particularly in the port, mining, and energy sectors. Abu Dhabi Ports announced its intention to invest in the ports of Matadi and Boma. The company also plans to invest in the development of the Lobito corridor, dry ports, and roads linking Lualaba to Zambia and Angola.

The mining sector is also in focus, with investments in the Bisie tin mine by the conglomerate IRH/IHC. Other projects concern the development of renewable energy. These are led by the companies Lone Star Ltd and Business Gate in the Tshopo province.

These initiatives are part of a broader context of cooperation between the DRC and Gulf countries. During the official visit of the Emir of Qatar, Sheikh Tamim Ben Hamad Al Thani, to Kinshasa on Nov. 21, 2025, an agreement on visa exemptions for holders of diplomatic and special passports was signed. This was accompanied by five memorandums of understanding in the economic, legal, diplomatic, social, and sports fields. Among these initiatives are port projects, cooperation between ministries, and social programs in South Kivu.

Boaz Kabeya

Posted On mercredi, 21 janvier 2026 17:33 Written by

The launch of an interbank electronic payments group in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) is expected by the end of March 2026. The IMF mentions this in its January country report on the DRC.

An interbank electronic payments group is a shared arrangement set up by banks, and sometimes the central bank, to jointly organize and manage electronic payments at the national level. It allows institutions to use common standards so that transactions move more smoothly from one bank to another. In its report, the IMF describes this launch as a key step in the modernization of the payments system.

In many countries, this type of interbank arrangement ensures interoperability, meaning that a customer of bank A can send money to a customer of bank B without friction. It manages shared infrastructure such as the national switch, clearing, and transaction routing. It can also deploy common services, including instant transfers, card or QR-code payments, and transfers across banks, microfinance institutions, and mobile money operators. In addition, it sets technical and security standards on cybersecurity and fraud prevention, while harmonizing certain fees and procedures.

To ensure “an orderly rollout consistent with technical and institutional requirements,” the establishment of the interbank electronic payments group in the DRC is being carried out with support from the International Finance Corporation (IFC), the World Bank Group’s private-sector arm.

In the DRC, financial inclusion rose from 38.5% in 2022 to 50% currently, mainly due to the expansion of mobile payment solutions. This progress is part of the National Financial Inclusion Strategy 2023-2028, adopted by the government in July 2023, which relies on strengthening payment infrastructure and tools. The report specifically cites the commissioning of the national electronic payment switch and the gradual interconnection of banks, microfinance institutions, and electronic money issuers.

The report adds that the launch of a platform called Visa Pay in September 2025, alongside the promotion of the Mosolo national card denominated in local currency, is part of these efforts aimed at “improving the range of digital financial services.”

Boaz Kabeya

Posted On mercredi, 21 janvier 2026 13:27 Written by

Congo Airways has begun a recruitment drive two weeks after taking delivery of an aircraft, the first of three acquired by the National Social Security Fund (CNSS), which holds a 31% stake in the airline.

Since Jan. 7, 2025, the carrier has posted three job ads seeking nine captains, nine first officers and four maintenance technicians. The pilots will be on probation for six months, while technicians will serve a three-month probation period, according to the notices.

The hires appear set to form the core crew to operate the new fleet now being assembled, and may also point to staff turnover. After suspending flights for around 10 months, Congo Airways has accumulated more than 10 months of unpaid wages, staff representatives said.

Meanwhile, the airline is also working to return an Airbus A320 to service after it was grounded by engine problems. In February 2025, it received approval from the Public Procurement Regulatory Authority (ARMP) to award a contract directly to FAI Aviation to buy two CFM56-5B5/3 engines, plus spare parts, for $12.33 million, according to an ARMP document.

So far, Congo Airways has not announced when it will restart flights or which destinations it will serve, though media reports say operations could resume in early 2026.

Timothée Manoke

Posted On mardi, 20 janvier 2026 16:54 Written by

The Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) plans to develop a nationwide network of grain silos through its General Strategic Reserve (RSG). Under the 2026-2028 Public Investment Plan, the government intends to allocate 14.5 billion Congolese francs, equivalent to about $6.6 million at the average exchange rate, for the construction of these facilities.

Serge Mulumba Katchy, the coordinator of the presidency-linked institution, announced that a pilot project will be set up in Kimpese, in Kongo Central province. In November 2025, he travelled to Italy to meet with the supplier producing the equipment for this first site. He said the Kimpese project would have a minimum capacity of 5,000 tonnes of grain and that the same model would later be rolled out in the country’s other provinces.

This preparatory work followed a working session held in October 2025 with experts from U.S. consulting firm International Reliable Consulting (IRC). According to the RSG, the discussions explored potential cooperation on the implementation of the silos and the establishment of a seed bank.

Created by presidential decree, the General Strategic Reserve is tasked with preventing and managing crises by building strategic stocks of essential goods. It aims to support food security, stabilise prices and assist local producers by building and renewing reserves that can be mobilised in the event of a crisis, shortage or natural disaster.

In September 2025, the institution intervened in the maize market in Kinshasa, offering 25-kg bags of maize flour for sale at 35,000 Congolese francs. This was significantly lower than prices in the capital at the time, which ranged between 40,000 and 63,000 francs depending on quality. The operation, carried out in several markets across the city, aimed to ease pressure on households and stabilise prices during a period of market strain.

Timothée Manoke

Posted On lundi, 19 janvier 2026 17:05 Written by

Buenassa is seeking financial backing to acquire a strategic domestic mining asset that is up for sale in the Katanga region, Chairman and Chief Executive Eddy Kioni said on Monday.

The announcement followed a meeting with Michael Kayembe, the new chief executive of United Bank for Africa (UBA) in the Democratic Republic of Congo. A source close to the Congolese company said the asset in question is mining firm Chemaf.

Bloomberg reported that Buenassa formally expressed interest in the copper and cobalt producer last November. The company’s future is being closely watched because of its assets and its role in the competition for critical minerals in the DRC.

Kioni said the acquisition would allow Buenassa to speed up its move toward vertical integration, from extraction to refining, trading and strategic stockpiling. He said it would secure feedstock for the refinery for more than 20 years.

He added that the plan would reduce operational risk and transform Buenassa from a greenfield industrial project into a major mining operator. The goal is to move from a planned project to a company producing mining assets capable of supplying a refinery and building an integrated value-chain model.

That approach sets Buenassa apart from several rival bids that are structured more around financial and commercial control of Chemaf. By comparison, state miner Gecamines, another Congolese contender, has proposed acquiring the company with a view to reselling it while retaining a maximum stake of 25%, Bloomberg reported.

Through its subsidiary Gecamines Trading, the state miner would market production corresponding to its stake to the United States, in line with a commitment the DRC made under a strategic agreement signed with Washington last December.

Industrial Goals

Buenassa says its bid is driven by industrial objectives, aimed at securing raw material for a refining project in the DRC rather than capturing output for export. That would align the project with the Congolese government’s push for local mineral processing.

Details of Buenassa’s offer remain unknown. Gecamines is reportedly considering an initial outlay of just under $1 million, an audit of the company and a plan to settle its liabilities, which media reports estimate at $900 million. Part of that debt is held by Trafigura, which arranged a $600 million loan in 2022 to finance development of the Mutoshi mine in Kolwezi.

Securing an extraction asset appears crucial for Buenassa. It would make the project easier to finance by providing collateral that could underpin borrowing for the refinery’s construction.

So far, the company has secured a $3.5 million public grant from the Industry Promotion Fund (FPI), though only part of it has reportedly been disbursed. The funding enabled completion of a scoping study.

The study puts the cost of the project’s first phase at $700 million, according to a document seen by Bankable. At that stage, the plant is expected to produce 30,000 tonnes of copper cathodes and 5,000 tonnes of cobalt sulphate a year.

The second phase is estimated to cost $2 billion. At that stage, output would rise to 120,000 tonnes of copper and 20,000 tonnes of cobalt a year. Those figures have yet to be refined.

Challenging Outlook

The revised timeline now forecasts a pre-feasibility study in early 2026 and a feasibility study in the second quarter of 2027. Financial close is projected for the third quarter of 2027, and production is not expected before 2029, compared with 2027 previously.

To finance the strategy, Buenassa is pitching a multi-layered approach combining African commercial banks, regional development finance institutions, local financial institutions, international strategic partners led by the United States, and the Congolese state. Since June 2025, the state has held a 10% stake in the Buenassa Ressources project company.

The meeting with UBA focused on building a financing structure capable of supporting both the refinery’s construction and the acquisition of an extraction asset.

Winning control of Chemaf may prove difficult. Guy-Robert Lukama, chairman of the Gecamines board, told Reuters in late 2024 that the state miner would not let it go to a rival bidder. Gecamines is in a strong position because it holds the permit on which Chemaf is developing the Mutoshi project.

The state is the sole shareholder of Gecamines and holds a 10% stake in Buenassa and 5% in Chemaf. It must decide while weighing its mining policy priorities.

Pierre Mukoko

Posted On lundi, 19 janvier 2026 16:47 Written by

The Democratic Republic of Congo plans to tighten controls on mining exports to boost revenue collection. In a report published in January 2026, the International Monetary Fund said authorities want a more reliable assessment of export volumes, mineral content and moisture levels, which are critical for valuation and tax calculations.

The report highlights the revenue impact of inadequate oversight. “Studies show that our country loses nearly half of its potential mining revenue due to insufficient controls on volumes and the content of valuable metals,” authorities cited in the report said. To address these weaknesses, authorities said they want to increase mining revenue collection by limiting direct contact in the control process.

One measure involves deploying technical tools by March 2026 to strengthen physical inspections of export shipments, including truck weighing scales and computerized, non-intrusive quality control systems.

The reform also includes stronger analytical capacity. The IMF said authorities aim to secure approval from the Ministry of Mines by January 2026 to bring into operation a mineral analysis laboratory contracted by the tax authority (DGI).

The goal is to build technical capacity to support inspections and strengthen compliance more broadly. The report also points to efforts to improve the assessment of export characteristics, including moisture and mineral content, which affect declared values and tax obligations.

Beyond mining, the IMF report highlights the broader challenge of modernizing financial administrations and controls. It notes that tax audits currently deliver less than 15 percent of their potential revenue, as authorities seek to improve data cross-checking through automation and digitization.

Overall, the IMF said the approach combines stronger physical and analytical controls on mining exports with a shift toward more automated systems, with the aim of improving enforcement and securing revenue.

Boaz Kabeya

Posted On vendredi, 16 janvier 2026 15:56 Written by

Australian miner AVZ Minerals said on Jan. 15, 2026 it had received the full amount of funding pledged last year by its partner Suzhou CATH Energy Technologies.

The Chinese firm provided a $20 million facility to AVZ, which says it holds rights to the Manono lithium project in Tanganyika province in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

AVZ said when the facility was announced in January 2025 that the funds would cover working capital needs and activities over the following 12 months, including costs linked to its dispute with the Congolese state over the project. The disbursement signals CATH is continuing to back AVZ.

Under the January 2025 agreement, CATH would gain several rights if AVZ succeeds in its claim to the Manono deposit. These include the option to buy 100% of the project’s lithium output for five years, or until AVZ recovers expenses financed under the deal. CATH would also have the right to acquire a 30.5% indirect stake in the project. The outcome remains uncertain.

Manono is the largest lithium deposit identified so far in the DRC. AVZ carried out exploration there for several years through a joint venture with state-owned Cominiere. Cominiere later ended the partnership and in 2023 teamed up with China’s Zijin Mining to develop the same project.

AVZ has launched multiple international legal actions to challenge the loss of its stake, but no final ruling has been issued.

A new player has also emerged: KoBold Metals. As ties between Kinshasa and Washington have warmed amid plans for new U.S. investment in the Congolese mining sector, the California-based startup signed an agreement in principle with the Congolese government last July for mineral exploration in the country.

KoBold has since obtained seven exploration licences, four of them in the Manono area.

Under the agreement in principle, KoBold is expected to help resolve the dispute between AVZ and the Congolese state. Two months earlier, KoBold and AVZ said they had reached a framework agreement under which AVZ would sell its commercial interests in Manono at what the companies described as a fair value.

AVZ, which had paused arbitration proceedings against the DRC to create what it called a “climate conducive to discussions” aimed at an amicable settlement, has since resumed the case.

Zijin Mining, which obtained an operating permit in September 2024 for the area claimed by AVZ, has said it expects to start production in 2026. It has provided few updates on the mine’s construction.

PM, with Ecofin Agency

Posted On vendredi, 16 janvier 2026 12:39 Written by

The Kipushi zinc mine in the Democratic Republic of Congo nearly quadrupled output in 2025, producing 203,168 tonnes of concentrate, up from 50,307 tonnes in 2024, Ivanhoe Mines said in its annual operating results published on Jan. 15, 2026. The mine is co-owned by Ivanhoe Mines (62%) and state miner Gécamines (38%).

The result was in line with Ivanhoe’s target of 180,000 to 240,000 tonnes.

The rise was driven by engineering work launched in September 2024 to boost throughput at the Kipushi concentrator by 20%. The optimisation programme was completed in early August 2025, helping lift output sharply in the second half of the year.

The mine delivered 57,200 tonnes in the third quarter and 61,444 tonnes in the fourth quarter, well above the 42,736 tonnes and 41,788 tonnes produced in the first and second quarters of 2025, respectively. Ivanhoe said recent output levels would rank Kipushi as the world’s fifth-largest zinc mine.

For 2026, Ivanhoe targets output of 240,000 to 290,000 tonnes. A key challenge will be maintaining stable operations, as the site faces an unreliable power supply from the Congolese grid. To mitigate the risk, the company said it expanded backup generator capacity in the fourth quarter of 2025.

Emiliano Tossou, with Ecofin Agency

Posted On vendredi, 16 janvier 2026 04:02 Written by

Telecommunications networks in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) have been disrupted for several days, according to the sector regulator.

In a statement on Wednesday, Jan. 14, the Regulatory Authority of the Post and Telecommunications of Congo (ARPTC) said the problems were caused by a major technical fault on the West Africa Cable System (WACS). The international undersea fibre-optic cable system links Europe to Africa and is affecting internet services in the country.

ARPTC said repair work was under way and that operators were working to restore services as quickly as possible. It added that it was coordinating with telecom operators to put in place measures to support subscribers, in line with the applicable provisions governing force majeure situations.

The incident has revived concerns about the robustness of the DRC’s digital infrastructure, even as authorities seek to use ICT as a driver of socio-economic development. WACS is one of the main international undersea systems used to provide access to the global internet and international connectivity.

The DRC also has access to the 2Africa cable. Its landing in Muanda was reported in September 2023, with commercial service expected to begin in late 2025.

The country also relies on regional terrestrial interconnections, including a fibre link reported via Lake Albert toward Uganda, according to industry media. It is therefore possible that the DRC is also experiencing knock-on effects from the internet shutdown in Uganda, imposed on the eve of the presidential and parliamentary elections being held on Jan. 15.

Infrastructure investment

On the investment front, authorities recently announced the signing of a $150 million partnership with the investment firm United Investment LMT (UIL), based in Mauritius. The deal was presented as a way to strengthen digital infrastructure.

Publicly available information highlights investments in connectivity and infrastructure. However, accessible sources do not yet provide consistent, detailed documentation confirming the effective installation of a new international undersea cable as part of the initiative.

The episode also recalls vulnerabilities exposed during major outages affecting several undersea cables in March 2024, which caused significant disruptions across multiple African countries. At the time, analysts and industry players regularly pointed to diversification of cable routes and the use of satellite solutions among the options to improve resilience.

Satellite resilience

Satellite connectivity is one of the options frequently cited in this context. The Global System for Mobile Communications Association (GSMA), for example, has highlighted satellite services as a complement to terrestrial networks and a potential lever to strengthen resilience.

Zimbabwe, a landlocked country with no direct access to a cable landing point, has said it is exploring partnerships with Low Earth Orbit (LEO) connectivity providers, according to public announcements relayed by local and international media. The DRC is also pursuing a telecommunications satellite project, which authorities have framed as part of a broader push for sovereignty and improved connectivity.

ARPTC’s statement follows instructions from President Felix Tshisekedi, who asked the relevant authorities to take measures to end recurring disruptions affecting telecommunications networks and systems nationwide. This included the possibility of sanctions against operators deemed to be failing to meet their obligations.

Isaac K. Kassouwi, with Ecofin Agency

Posted On jeudi, 15 janvier 2026 14:48 Written by
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