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DRC president orders probe into copper and cobalt export revenues, document shows
DRC's President Felix Tshisekedi has ordered a comprehensive audit of mining export revenues and state assets, warning that weak controls were preventing the country from fully benefiting from record copper and cobalt exports.
DRC president orders probe into copper and cobalt export revenues, document shows
DR Congo is a top supplier of cobalt and copper globally. / Reuters

Democratic Republic of Congo’s President Felix Tshisekedi has ordered a comprehensive audit of mining export revenues and state assets, warning that weak controls were preventing the country from fully benefiting from record copper and cobalt exports, according to cabinet minutes seen by Reuters.

DR Congo is a top supplier of cobalt and copper, and also holds vast reserves of lithium, gold and coltan, making it a battleground in the global competition to secure critical mineral supply chains.

The Congolese government has signed separate minerals deals with the United States and China as the two foreign nations seek to build critical mineral stockpiles to aid the clean-energy and battery electric vehicle transition.

The Central African nation exported about 3.4 million metric tonnes of copper in 2025, up from 3.1 million tonnes in 2024, while cobalt exports reached around 220,000 tonnes, according to figures cited at a cabinet meeting chaired by Tshisekedi on Friday but seen this week.

DR Congo shipped about 955,000 metric tonnes of copper between January and March 2026, down from about 1.09 million tonnes a year earlier, Reuters reported this month.

Revenue loss

Despite surging output, Tshisekedi said the state was losing revenues due to poor oversight, opaque joint ventures involving state mining assets, non‑repatriation of earnings and capital flight through fraudulent imports.

The president ordered an exhaustive audit within 30 days to identify unpaid revenues and governance failures in mining partnerships, according to the minutes. It did not specify the mechanisms and scope of the audits.

He also instructed authorities to fully interconnect customs, port agencies, the central bank and commercial banks, saying no mineral export or import should escape a single traceable chain. Initial findings are due by June 15, the minutes said.

DR Congo has recently launched mining reforms to tighten state control over the mineral sector to help boost revenues. A state audit found that major mining companies underreported about $16.8 billion between 2018 and 2023, potentially reducing funds for the government and local communities.

Tshisekedi further ordered a crackdown on illegal mining operations. Measures include seizure of illegal equipment and criminal prosecution.

SOURCE:reuters