Executive Summary
The DRC's mineral heartland entered 2026 with production growth at major mines, preparations for the historic EGC cobalt shipment, and mounting community displacement concerns in Kolwezi. The mining sector continues to dominate economic activity in the corridor's DRC segment, with copper production growth and cobalt market challenges creating divergent outcomes for different mining communities.
Mining Sector Developments
Kamoa-Kakula reported record monthly copper production, with the Phase 3 expansion on schedule. Kipushi commenced commercial germanium recovery. Tenke Fungurume (CMOC) maintained steady copper-cobalt output. Kamoto (Glencore) operated at capacity despite community tensions. Cobalt price weakness continued to pressure artisanal mining incomes across Kolwezi.
Corridor Infrastructure
The Dilolo-Kolwezi railway remains the weakest infrastructure link in the corridor chain. The World Bank $500M request for rehabilitation advanced through preparation stages. Meanwhile, road transport continues to supplement limited rail capacity for mineral exports from Katanga to the Angolan border at Luau.
Community Impact
Bel Air, Kolwezi residents reported preliminary displacement notices for railway alignment works. Consultation processes fell short of IFC Performance Standard 5 requirements. Security incidents near Tenke Fungurume involved artisanal miners and raised Voluntary Principles concerns. The EGC monopoly on artisanal cobalt purchasing continued to face criticism from mining cooperatives in Kolwezi regarding purchase prices.
Security Environment
The security environment in Katanga Province remained generally stable but localised tensions around mining concession boundaries persisted. Eastern DRC conflict continued to affect tantalum and tin supply chains under EU Conflict Minerals Regulation oversight, though the Lobito Corridor's southern Katanga focus is geographically distinct from eastern conflict zones.
Stakeholder Engagement Summary
Stakeholder engagement activities during this period included formal consultations between project proponents and affected communities, civil society dialogue sessions, and bilateral meetings between corridor investors and government counterparts. Our monitoring of these engagement processes assessed participation quality, information disclosure adequacy, and responsiveness to community concerns. Findings inform our ongoing advocacy for meaningful community participation in corridor governance.
Community concerns expressed during formal consultation processes focused on employment opportunities, displacement risks, environmental protection, and benefit-sharing arrangements. The quality of responses to these concerns varied significantly across project proponents, with some providing detailed commitments and follow-up mechanisms while others offered vague assurances without accountability frameworks. Our documentation of consultation quality provides evidence for advocacy promoting improved engagement standards.
International stakeholder attention to the corridor remained strong during this period, with media coverage, policy discussions, and academic analysis contributing to the public discourse on corridor development. Our media monitoring tracked coverage quality and accuracy, identifying misinformation and providing corrections through our own content platform. Media engagement remained a priority for ensuring that public understanding of corridor developments reflects ground-level realities rather than promotional narratives.
Outlook and Priorities
The coming period presents both opportunities and challenges for corridor development in this country. Anticipated policy decisions, investment milestones, and construction activities will create monitoring priorities that our field presence addresses. Community advocacy priorities identified through our engagement processes will guide our intervention strategy. The evolving regulatory landscape across all three corridor countries requires continued attention to harmonisation efforts and implementation quality.
Our monitoring priorities for the next period include tracking infrastructure construction progress against committed timelines, documenting community impact of ongoing and planned construction activities, assessing compliance with environmental management plans, and monitoring labour rights across construction sites. These priorities reflect both our systematic monitoring framework and specific concerns identified through community reporting channels.
Economic Indicators
Macroeconomic conditions during this period reflected the broader dynamics shaping corridor development. Currency movements, inflation trends, and fiscal policy decisions all affect the corridor's economic viability and community welfare. Exchange rate depreciation in corridor countries increases the local-currency cost of imported goods while improving the competitiveness of mineral exports — a dynamic that benefits mining companies while potentially worsening living standards for communities dependent on imported food and consumer goods.
Foreign direct investment flows into the mining sector remained positive but concentrated in large-scale operations with established international operators. Smaller mining operations and local businesses along the corridor reported difficulty accessing capital, a constraint that limits the local economic multiplier effects that corridor advocates project. Our investment tracking monitors both headline FDI figures and the distribution of investment across enterprise sizes and ownership structures.
Infrastructure Progress Assessment
Physical infrastructure progress during this period was assessed through direct observation, contractor reporting, and satellite imagery analysis. Railway rehabilitation advanced according to the phased construction schedule, with track laying, bridge reconstruction, and signalling installation proceeding across active construction fronts. Our monitoring verified progress claims against observable infrastructure changes, documenting instances where reported progress exceeded actual completion.
Port infrastructure at Lobito continued its expansion programme with new berth construction, crane installation, and storage facility development. Capacity projections indicate that current port expansion will accommodate projected corridor freight volumes through the medium term, though longer-term growth may require additional investment beyond current commitments.
Road infrastructure supporting corridor logistics — particularly the N1 highway rehabilitation — progressed with EU Global Gateway financing. Road quality improvements benefit community mobility alongside logistics efficiency, representing the type of dual-purpose infrastructure that maximises corridor development impact.
Human Rights & Security Assessment
Our human rights monitoring during this period documented conditions across corridor-affected communities, with particular attention to displacement risks, labour rights, and security force conduct. Community monitors reported through our secure channels, with significant findings verified through independent investigation and documented with evidence archive-preserved evidence.
Security incidents along the corridor were monitored with attention to the conduct of both private security companies and state security forces. The Voluntary Principles on Security and Human Rights provide the benchmark standard against which we assess security-related human rights performance. Incidents documented during this period were reported to relevant authorities and DFI accountability mechanisms.