DR CONGO · SCIENCE
Key Facts
—First national satellite: RDC-SAT will be the DR Congo’s first Earth-observation satellite, built by Belgium’s Spacebel.
—Signed in Kinshasa: The agreement was concluded on June 16, 2026 with the Ministry of Higher Education, Universities, Scientific Research and Innovation.
—What it carries: The 250-kilogram satellite will carry a hyperspectral imager that captures fine detail across the country.
—What it watches: Its data will support agriculture, mining, forestry, mapping, climate monitoring and disaster response.
—Who runs it: The satellite will be operated by the National Remote Sensing Centre, with Congolese engineers trained to run it.
—Timeline: Launch is expected within four to five years.
The DR Congo satellite known as RDC-SAT will give the country its own eyes in space, able to track its rainforests, mines and rivers without leaning on foreign imagery. The deal, signed with the Belgian firm Spacebel, marks Congo’s entry into operational Earth observation.
What the DR Congo satellite will do
RDC-SAT is designed to photograph Congolese territory in fine detail and, crucially, to do so on the country’s own schedule rather than a foreign provider’s. That independence is as much the point as the images themselves.
Its hyperspectral instrument reads dozens of bands of light at once, far more than an ordinary camera. That allows analysts to separate healthy forest from freshly cleared land, or bare soil from mineralised rock.
The resulting imagery is meant to serve agriculture, mining oversight, forestry and national mapping. It is equally built for climate monitoring and for responding quickly when floods or fires strike.
A deal made in Belgium
The contract was signed in Kinshasa on June 16 with Spacebel, a Belgian company with decades of experience building small Earth-observation satellites. The agreement is managed through the country’s ministry of higher education, research and innovation.
It covers the full life of the mission, from development and commissioning to long-term maintenance. Just as important, it includes training so Congolese engineers can run the system and process its data themselves.
The 250-kilogram spacecraft is expected to reach orbit within four to five years. Once aloft, it will be operated from the ground by the National Remote Sensing Centre.
Why a mineral giant wants its own eyes in the sky
The DR Congo holds some of the world’s largest reserves of cobalt and copper, the metals at the heart of electric cars and data centres. Global demand for both is climbing year after year.
Yet the country has long relied on foreign satellites to see its own land, whether tracking illegal mining pits or measuring advancing deforestation. That dependence leaves real gaps in what the state can document and prove.
Owning the imagery shifts the balance of power. Kinshasa can monitor its resources, borders and forests on its own terms, without asking another government for permission.
Watching the world’s second lung
Beyond minerals, the satellite’s most valuable subject may be the Congo Basin rainforest, the planet’s second-largest after the Amazon. It is a vast store of carbon that the world increasingly wants measured.
Reliable, home-grown imagery would help Congo quantify deforestation and press stronger claims in the fast-growing market for forest-carbon credits. In those deals, trustworthy data is effectively the currency.
The same images would give the government independent eyes on illegal logging and unlicensed mining. Patchy or delayed foreign data has often missed both until the damage was done.
Part of a wider African space push
Congo joins a lengthening list of African states pouring money into satellites, ground stations and home-grown space expertise. The pace of that investment has picked up sharply over the past few years.
By the end of 2025, nineteen African countries had launched roughly 68 satellites between them, and a new African Space Agency is now coordinating the effort. It has set a target of more than 120 satellites in orbit by 2030.
For governments, space has shifted from a prestige project to a practical instrument. It increasingly underpins farming, mapping, security and climate resilience.
The hard part comes after launch
A satellite, in the end, is only as useful as the people and systems that turn its images into decisions. Building and launching the hardware is often the easier part.
That is why the training component matters so much. Without skilled local analysts, even excellent imagery risks gathering dust on a server.
Launch is still several years away, and Congo will need steady funding and political continuity to keep RDC-SAT working once it is up. Space programmes are marathons, not sprints.
A prize in the new scramble
Congo’s reach for space also unfolds against a wider contest for influence across Africa. Foreign powers from Europe, China, Russia and the Gulf are all courting the continent with technology, infrastructure and finance.
Choosing a Belgian partner for such a strategic asset is itself a quiet statement of alignment. Other African states have turned instead to Russian or Chinese suppliers for their first satellites.
For Kinshasa, the aim is less about taking sides than about gaining leverage. A country that can see its own land tends to negotiate from a stronger position.
Frequently asked questions
What is RDC-SAT?
It is the DR Congo’s first Earth-observation satellite, a 250-kilogram spacecraft being built by Belgium’s Spacebel.
When was the DR Congo satellite deal signed?
The agreement was concluded in Kinshasa on June 16, 2026 with the country’s science and innovation ministry.
What will the satellite be used for?
It will monitor agriculture, mining, forests, rivers, climate and disasters, and support national mapping.
When will RDC-SAT launch?
The satellite is expected to launch within four to five years, operated by the National Remote Sensing Centre.
The Rio Times · Power Map
See who really holds power in Latin America
Click to open the Power Map →
View original source — Rio Times ↗


