Rising Footfall Signals Growing Green Appetite
Brazzaville’s dense traffic to the 2025 Plant Fair surprised even seasoned exhibitors. Over 4 400 people—up 32 % from 2024—walked the aisles of saplings, compost and pruning gear across Brazzaville, Pointe-Noire and Oyo, underscoring a widening popular commitment to tree-based solutions.
A Flagship Event for UN Reforestation Decade
Held under the banner of the United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration, the ninth edition served as a barometer of how local actors translate global climate ambitions into household decisions. Horticulturists deliberately showcased species suited to Congo’s twin goals of forest cover expansion and diversified agro-income.
Numbers Tell a Mixed Story
Visitor tallies soared, yet sales softened. The National Afforestation and Reforestation Programme reported 16 886 plants sold—a 39.5 % contraction—while turnover slid nearly 48 % to CFA 27.9 million. The contradiction between traffic and ticket size is forcing exhibitors to rethink their value proposition.
Pointe-Noire Powers the Footfall Surge
Port city dynamics mattered. Pointe-Noire alone supplied most of the additional visitors and buyers, confirming its role as an emerging retail hub for green products. Ten exhibitors there translated curiosity into reasonable volume, even if average baskets were slimmer than last year.
Popular Species: Fruits Still Reign
Congolese households maintained a clear bias toward fruit trees. Safoutier, avocado, citrus and mango varieties dominated demand, reflecting both culinary preferences and the promise of future household income. Ornamental and timber species played second fiddle despite aggressive promotion.
Why Were Wallets Thinner?
Grower Vianney Samba cited multiple factors: inflationary pressures, limited after-sale advisory services and patchy follow-up that erodes planter confidence. Without mentoring, first-time buyers often lose plants, dampening repeat purchases. Analysts also point to stalled public-sector projects that normally absorb bulk orders.
Quality Over Quantity Becomes the Mantra
In a joint declaration, the 36 participating growers pledged to pivot toward sturdier, well-rooted stock and to introduce drought-tolerant cultivars. Training sessions on grafting, pruning and transport handling are scheduled, aiming to lift survival rates and justify premium pricing next season.
Minister Matondo Applauds Resilience
Forest Economy Minister Rosalie Matondo closed the fair praising exhibitors’ resilience amid an uncertain macro backdrop and the temporary relocation of Brazzaville’s venue. She described the visitor uptick as validation of national reforestation policy, yet urged tighter quality control and formalisation of horticultural micro-enterprises.
Linking Growers to Carbon Finance Streams
Matondo reminded participants that Congo’s forest agenda now leans on payment for environmental services. By certifying nurseries and tracking plant survival, growers could access carbon credits or biodiversity offsets—new revenue channels that hedge against retail volatility.
Data Points Guide Investor Decisions
Turnover dipped, but the fair’s granular statistics offer investors rare visibility. Unit prices averaged CFA 1 648, down 15 %. Fruit seedlings turned over quickest, while shade-tree saplings lingered. Such metrics help financiers calibrate working-capital lines or design purchase-order financing schemes.
SME Formalisation Gains Momentum
Many exhibitors still operate informally, limiting access to loans and insurance. The ministry signalled forthcoming guidelines that will nudge them into the tax net but also unlock state-backed credit guarantees. Structured governance is expected to lift sector credibility and resilience.
Eyes on February 2026 National Agri Expo
The next milestone is Congo’s flagship agricultural fair slated for February 2026. Matondo confirmed dedicated pavilions for horticulture and a new merit-award scheme. Growers view the event as a launchpad for upgraded catalogues and potentially lucrative supply contracts with mining and oil operators.
Innovation Pipeline: From Biochar to Digital Vouchers
Several start-ups teased products not yet commercialised, such as biochar-mixed potting soil and QR-coded gift vouchers that track sapling growth. Investors scouting scalable climate solutions found early-stage concepts ripe for seed funding, pending proof of market traction.
Public-Private Partnerships in the Making
Officials hinted that city councils may soon outsource urban greening to private nurseries under performance-based contracts. Such PPPs could secure predictable offtake for growers while enabling municipalities to meet climate-adaptation targets within tight budget envelopes.
Gender Lens: Women at the Helm
Women entrepreneurs accounted for roughly 40 % of exhibitors, mirroring broader trends in Africa’s green economy. The ministry distributed improved cookstoves to several mothers as a token gesture, but observers call for systematic inclusion in upcoming financing windows.
Skills Transfer Remains a Bottleneck
Horticultural science courses are scarce in national curricula. Exhibitors requested partnerships with technical colleges to ensure a pipeline of skilled grafters, soil scientists and sales agents. Capacity-building is viewed as equally critical as capital in scaling quality production.
Takeaways for Portfolio Managers
Despite a soft revenue patch, the fair signals resilient end-demand for green assets. Portfolio managers eyeing Congo can blend equity stakes in nurseries with debt to logistics suppliers, betting on policy support for forest-based climate action and urban landscaping mandates.
Looking Ahead to the Tenth Edition
Organisers aim to shorten the 2026 edition to six weeks to concentrate demand and cut overheads. Digital ticketing will refine visitor analytics, while an online marketplace should prolong sales beyond the physical show, potentially decoupling revenue from footfall swings.










































