Cobalt Blockchain expects final approval shortly for DRC copper/cobalt trading, export license

Canada-based Cobalt Blockchain Inc (COBC) expects final ratification shortly for a copper/cobalt trading and export license that will allow it to establish regional buying depots in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), process minerals in-country and export internationally.

The exploration and development company, which has assets in the DRC, said its application for the license as well as all associated licensing fees and studies have now been submitted to the country’s Ministry of Mines.

COBC has started initial arrangements to set up its cobalt trading facilities in the DRC, which will include a 1,000 square meter depot with storage, assay laboratory, clinic and office capabilities. The depot site will also incorporate perimeter fencing and security equipment.

On completion of the trading depot, COBC will purchase its first cobalt concentrate from COMIKU, one of the largest local mining cooperatives in the Lualaba province, following a supply agreement announced on Friday April 6. Under the agreement and starting in June, COBC will be supplied with a minimum of 40,000 tonnes per year of cobalt concentrate, with a minimum grade of 1% cobalt.

COBC is the first mining and mineral trade company set up specifically to procure cobalt in compliance with the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) due diligence framework, which ensures it addresses child labour and other challenges associated with artisanal and small-scale mining in the DRC.

Since March, COBC has been working with BetterChain SL to develop an autonomous due diligence protocol. The protocol can be used by any upstream mining and mineral trade operator to demonstrate OECD compliance and improve upstream reporting, whether sourced via artisanal and small-scale mining or otherwise, and throughout the mining supply chain.

COBC is also continuing to work with other partners toward establishing a blockchain platform to provide greater certainty of provenance and further assurance that all minerals procured are ethically sourced.

The mining sector in the mineral-rich DRC, a key producer of copper and cobalt, has flourished following a recovery in metals prices and because of the push toward more use of electric vehicles (EVs) globally.

Cobalt prices have risen as a result, with Metal Bulletin’s benchmark price assessment for low-grade material, free market settling at $42.85-43.85 per lb, in-warehouse, on Friday May 18. This was up by 73% from a year ago.

What to read next
The proposal would align the index more closely with physically traded volumes in the region, and enable it to adjust to evolving market conditions. This proposal follows an observed widening of the spread between trader and smelter purchase components of the index and is aligned with a majority of market feedback. Additionally, Fastmarkets seeks feedback […]
Until now, aluminium has been hard to move, not hard to find. Global aluminium supply had remained technically intact, even as output was curtailed in parts of the Gulf, inventory buffers were drawn down or repositioned, and shipping through the Strait of Hormuz was severely disrupted.
Global aluminium producers face heightened uncertainty over power supplies, with oil and gas prices elevated by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, through which around 20% of global oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG) flows, sources told Fastmarkets.
Fastmarkets is extending the consultation period for the methodology of several of its black mass payables indicators and prices, and is also proposing changes to the names of CIF South Korea and EWX Europe black mass prices.
Rio Tinto Aluminium is expanding its footprint beyond its historic hydro-powered Canadian base, targeting Europe, Asia and Latin America as part of a deliberate diversification strategy, according to the unit’s chief executive officer.
Fastmarkets has corrected its copper concentrates treatment and refinement charge indices, which were published incorrectly on March 20 2026 due to a technical error.