• About us
  • Advertising
  • Careers
  • Contact
Congo-Brazzaville
Friday, October 24, 2025
No Result
View All Result
CONTRIBUTE
Congo Investor
  • Home
  • World

    Nigeria’s Mshelbila to Lead GECF, Boost African Gas

    Brazzaville’s Kélé Kélé Greens Boom

    Congo Elevates Mediation Stakes in Hong Kong

    Global South Powers Growth: China-Africa Focus

  • Politics

    Congo Eyes 2030 PPR-Free Status to Boost Agribiz

    CEMAC Livestock Body Puts 2026 Budget Behind Import Shift

    Brazzaville Summit Signals New Sahel Security Drive

    Djiri Water Plant Land Under Siege? LCDE Warns

  • Companies

    Six Moves Reshaping Congo’s Oil Giant

    Seven-Point Plan to Rev Up SNPC Performance

    Brazzaville Forum May Boost Women-Led Enterprises

    UBA Foundation Lifts Brazzaville Orphanages

  • Tech

    Brazzaville Engineer Aims for Top AU Telecoms Job

    Congo Bets on AI to Turbocharge Financial Growth

    SIM Mystery: Congo’s Low ID Rate Alarms Market

    Congo SIM Registration Slump: Risks and Remedies

  • Markets

    Africa Takes the Helm at Global Gas Forum

    Brazzaville Crypto Summit Sparks High-Stakes Debate

    Energy Titans Eye Africa at WAES 2025

    Aberdeen Summit Unlocks Africa’s Next Energy Boom

  • Climate

    Brazzaville Youth Gear Up to Defend Congo’s Climate Stakes

    Congo’s Urban Sanitation Strategy Spurs Green Jobs

    Congo’s NDC 3.0 Sets New Course for Green Finance

    Congo’s New Green Finance Tools Set to Pay Off

  • Society & Arts

    Brazzaville Unveils 10k-Seat Liberty School Hub

    Italy-Congo U18 Cup fuels youth, diplomacy

    Mandarin Masters Win Big at Brazzaville Awards

    How Group Rouge Ignited Congo’s Seventies Pop Boom

  • Work & Careers

    Oyo Scholarship Drive Powers Congo’s Energy Talent

    Brazzaville Women’s Forum Fuels Inclusive Growth

    Brazzaville Eyes Pan-African Women Biz Hub

    Congo’s Teacher Surge Spurs Tech Skills Race

  • Home
  • World

    Nigeria’s Mshelbila to Lead GECF, Boost African Gas

    Brazzaville’s Kélé Kélé Greens Boom

    Congo Elevates Mediation Stakes in Hong Kong

    Global South Powers Growth: China-Africa Focus

  • Politics

    Congo Eyes 2030 PPR-Free Status to Boost Agribiz

    CEMAC Livestock Body Puts 2026 Budget Behind Import Shift

    Brazzaville Summit Signals New Sahel Security Drive

    Djiri Water Plant Land Under Siege? LCDE Warns

  • Companies

    Six Moves Reshaping Congo’s Oil Giant

    Seven-Point Plan to Rev Up SNPC Performance

    Brazzaville Forum May Boost Women-Led Enterprises

    UBA Foundation Lifts Brazzaville Orphanages

  • Tech

    Brazzaville Engineer Aims for Top AU Telecoms Job

    Congo Bets on AI to Turbocharge Financial Growth

    SIM Mystery: Congo’s Low ID Rate Alarms Market

    Congo SIM Registration Slump: Risks and Remedies

  • Markets

    Africa Takes the Helm at Global Gas Forum

    Brazzaville Crypto Summit Sparks High-Stakes Debate

    Energy Titans Eye Africa at WAES 2025

    Aberdeen Summit Unlocks Africa’s Next Energy Boom

  • Climate

    Brazzaville Youth Gear Up to Defend Congo’s Climate Stakes

    Congo’s Urban Sanitation Strategy Spurs Green Jobs

    Congo’s NDC 3.0 Sets New Course for Green Finance

    Congo’s New Green Finance Tools Set to Pay Off

  • Society & Arts

    Brazzaville Unveils 10k-Seat Liberty School Hub

    Italy-Congo U18 Cup fuels youth, diplomacy

    Mandarin Masters Win Big at Brazzaville Awards

    How Group Rouge Ignited Congo’s Seventies Pop Boom

  • Work & Careers

    Oyo Scholarship Drive Powers Congo’s Energy Talent

    Brazzaville Women’s Forum Fuels Inclusive Growth

    Brazzaville Eyes Pan-African Women Biz Hub

    Congo’s Teacher Surge Spurs Tech Skills Race

No Result
View All Result
Congo Investor
No Result
View All Result
Home Politics

CEMAC Livestock Body Puts 2026 Budget Behind Import Shift

by Congo Investor
October 23, 2025
in Politics
Reading Time: 3 mins read

Brazzaville council sets the tone

Gathered in Brazzaville for its fifteenth ordinary council, the Central African Livestock, Meat and Fisheries Commission, Cébévirha, opened two days of technical deliberation on 23 October, determined to align its next triennial programme with CEMAC’s push for import substitution.

Delegates from Cameroon, Central African Republic, Gabon, Equatorial Guinea, Chad and Congo reviewed activity reports for 2024-2025 and prepared to endorse the institution’s draft 2026 budget, a financial envelope expected to mirror the scale of Cébévirha’s growing regional mandate.

Import-substitution: a 2021 presidential directive

The import-substitution framework was first mandated by CEMAC heads of state in August 2021, when rising freight costs and pandemic disruptions exposed the region’s reliance on external staples such as fish, rice, wheat, cassava derivatives and refined fuels.

By encouraging domestic production and regional trade, leaders aim to shield foreign reserves, cut logistical vulnerabilities and channel new jobs into rural communities where pastoral and artisanal fisheries already represent a significant share of livelihoods.

Cébévirha, created in 1973, has become the technical arm responsible for translating that high-level ambition into field programmes, veterinary campaigns and market intelligence, thereby positioning livestock and fisheries as strategic pillars within the wider CEMAC integration agenda.

Sizing the 2026 budget

While the draft figures remained undisclosed at press time, officials repeatedly emphasised that the envelope must be “commensurate with ambition”, suggesting incremental increases over the current biennial allocation, which has already been buoyed by partner grants and internally generated resources.

Priority spending lines under discussion include laboratory networks to monitor transboundary animal diseases, cold-chain upgrades at community abattoirs, and seed funding for pilot aquaculture clusters intended to demonstrate commercial viability to banks and insurance providers.

Management also plans to reserve a contingency window for climate resilience, reflecting the fact that erratic rainfall and flooding in parts of the Congo Basin have recently disrupted grazing corridors and inland fisheries, with consequent volatility in regional meat prices.

According to Kaya-Tobi, the Council chair, this disciplined approach ensures “each franc invested by our members or partners delivers measurable impact on both household welfare and macro-economic stability”. The statement drew unanimous approval, signalling cohesion among the six delegations present.

Operational roadmap under construction

Beyond the macro numbers, the meeting focused on two deliverables: an operational plan and a prioritised action matrix, both intended to translate the broad strategy into time-bound milestones that can be monitored by finance ministries and external auditors.

Drafts circulated on the first day place early emphasis on harmonising veterinary certificates, simplifying customs codes for feed ingredients and deploying digital traceability tools so that cross-border consignments can move seamlessly across CEMAC corridors managed by joint patrols.

A second wave of actions, pencilled for 2025-2026, foresees stimulus packages for domestic feed mills and hatcheries, alongside public-private partnerships to rehabilitate artisanal fish landing sites, ultimately lowering post-harvest losses that currently average double the global benchmark.

Potential for investors and SMEs

For international investors, the upcoming budget cycle signals a clearer pipeline of bankable projects, partly de-risked by Cébévirha’s regional guarantee and by the oversight of the Development Bank of Central African States, which has been a recurring co-financier.

Equity funds already present in forestry and logistics have expressed interest in integrated feed operations, seeing synergies with existing rail or river assets that can reduce inland transport charges, historically one of the steepest cost variables in Central African agribusiness.

Local SMEs, meanwhile, expect the harmonised regulatory environment to unlock supplier credit from commercial banks once veterinary standards and market data become more predictable, according to the Congolese federation of livestock producers.

Analysts at the Douala commodities exchange argue that forward contracts for maize and soybean, two key feed components, could emerge as early beneficiaries of the Cébévirha roadmap, offering hedging solutions that reduce price shocks on finished meat products.

Food security and regional integration

Central Africa currently imports an estimated 40 percent of its animal protein, a dependency that places pressure on exchange rates whenever global prices spike; Cébévirha’s chair believes the new plan could halve that ratio within a decade if fully financed.

The proposal dovetails with the African Continental Free Trade Area, under which CEMAC nations seek comparative advantage through specialised value chains rather than blanket self-sufficiency, positioning Congo-Brazzaville’s river ports as logical hubs for regional distribution.

Government representatives reiterated that the strategy is not protectionist; tariff walls remain within WTO ceilings, and the emphasis lies on productivity, sanitary reforms and intraregional logistics, arenas where public funding can crowd in rather than crowd out private capital.

With the 2026 budget set for adoption at the session’s close, stakeholders left day one satisfied that Cébévirha is translating presidential vision into actionable programmes, while preserving fiscal prudence in a challenging global financing context.

Next steps include circulating the final budget to national treasuries by December, enabling line ministries to synchronise their 2026 appropriations and ensuring that key tenders can be launched early, a timetable designed to compress the traditionally long execution cycle.

Tags: Brazzaville CourtCébévirhaCEMACImport Substitutionlivestock
Previous Post

Brazzaville Crypto Summit Sparks High-Stakes Debate

Next Post

Congo Eyes 2030 PPR-Free Status to Boost Agribiz

Related Posts

Congo Eyes 2030 PPR-Free Status to Boost Agribiz

by Congo Investor
October 23, 2025

National drive gains momentum In Brazzaville, a three-day workshop opened on 22 October, bringing thirty national and international experts around...

Brazzaville Summit Signals New Sahel Security Drive

by Congo Investor
October 22, 2025

Brazzaville Consultation Highlights President Denis Sassou Nguesso welcomed former Niger head of state Mahamadou Issoufou to Brazzaville on 21 October...

Djiri Water Plant Land Under Siege? LCDE Warns

by Congo Investor
October 18, 2025

Strategic lifeline for Brazzaville water On the green northern outskirts of Brazzaville, the Djiri water production complex quietly pumps, treats...

Congo Senate Targets Lean Budget Before 2026 Vote

by Congo Investor
October 18, 2025

Budget Session Signals Fiscal Discipline Meeting in Brazzaville on 15 October, the Senate opened its seventh ordinary budget session with...

Brazzaville Eyes Leaner 2026 Budget, Investors Watch

by Congo Investor
October 17, 2025

Parliament opens critical budget session Parliament in Brazzaville has opened its seventh ordinary budget session, launching a line-by-line review of...

Heavy Rains Test Congo’s Roads and Cash Reserves

by Congo Investor
October 17, 2025

Seasonal showers return over southern hubs Early October showers have once again blanketed Congo-Brazzaville, marking the return of the small...

Load More
Next Post

Congo Eyes 2030 PPR-Free Status to Boost Agribiz

Popular News

  • Brazzaville Unveils 10k-Seat Liberty School Hub

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Brazzaville Engineer Aims for Top AU Telecoms Job

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Africa Takes the Helm at Global Gas Forum

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Nigeria’s Mshelbila to Lead GECF, Boost African Gas

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Congo Eyes 2030 PPR-Free Status to Boost Agribiz

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Your trusted platform for economic and financial reporting, covering markets, energy, and industrial developments shaping Congo-Brazzaville’s future.

Sections
  • Home
  • World
  • Politics
  • Companies
  • Tech
  • Markets
  • Climate
  • Society & Arts
  • Work & Careers
  • Home
  • World
  • Politics
  • Companies
  • Tech
  • Markets
  • Climate
  • Society & Arts
  • Work & Careers
Legal & Policies
  • Cookie Policy
  • Corrections Policy
  • Fact-Checking Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Republishing Policy
  • Slavery and Human Trafficking Statement
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Cookie Policy
  • Corrections Policy
  • Fact-Checking Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Republishing Policy
  • Slavery and Human Trafficking Statement
  • Terms and Conditions
Services
  • About us
  • Advertising
  • Careers
  • Contact
  • Join Our Network of Contributors
  • About us
  • Advertising
  • Careers
  • Contact
  • Join Our Network of Contributors

2025 CongoInvestor – All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World
  • Politics
  • Companies
  • Tech
  • Markets
  • Climate
  • Society & Arts
  • Work & Careers

© 2025 Congo Investor - All Rights Reseved.