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Congo creates strategic cobalt reserve to influence supply and prices

Democratic Republic of Congo has established ‌a strategic reserve for cobalt and other critical minerals, strengthening its ability to stockpile unused export quotas and exert more control over global supplies.

Under a decree adopted by the cabinet on 10th April ​2026, management of the strategic reserve has been handed to the markets regulator ARECOMS, which ​is now authorised to acquire, hold and market strategic minerals, the agency said ⁠in a statement.

Congo is the world’s largest producer of cobalt, a critical component of electric vehicle ​batteries, and accounted for about 70% of global supplies last year.

AFNIS 2026

It imposed a months-long export ban early last ​year before moving to a quota regime in October, as it grappled with a price slump caused by oversupply.

Congo shipped about 48,800 metric tons of cobalt in the first quarter of this year, compared with roughly 123,000 tons in the same period ​last year, when exports were frontloaded before the four-month freeze on exports.

Under the quota framework, Congo said ​it would reserve 10% of national cobalt export volumes for strategic use by the state. For 2026, that amounted ‌to ⁠9,600 metric tons.

In March, Congo also warned miners that any export quota volumes that fail to ship within set deadlines would be transferred to the government’s strategic quota. Companies that did not export their allocated fourth-quarter 2025 quotas by 30th April, and first-quarter 2026 quotas by end-June would lose them to the ​reserve, the regulator said.

The strategic ​reserve announced on ⁠Thursday will serve as the government’s vehicle for managing its quota volumes.

China’s CMOC and Glencore, the world’s top producers of cobalt, operate in Congo alongside the ​Eurasian Resources Group, Huayou and Chinese-controlled Sicomines, among other miners.

The strategic reserve ​gives the ⁠state an additional lever to intervene in global cobalt markets, complementing the quota policy aimed at rebalancing prices, ARECOMS said.

“It will allow the Congolese state to intervene in a targeted manner regarding the quantities of strategic ⁠mineral ​substances available in order to maintain the balance of the international ​market and contribute to strengthening its economic sovereignty.”

Congo designated cobalt, coltan and germanium as strategic minerals under a 2018 decree, effectively ​placing their production and export under enhanced state oversight.

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Reuters News

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