Belgian museum, US mining company at odds over colonial-era congo archive
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on March 4, 2026
4 min readLast updated: March 4, 2026
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on March 4, 2026
4 min readLast updated: March 4, 2026
A dispute has erupted between KoBold Metals and Belgium’s AfricaMuseum over digitising colonial-era geological archives of the DRC, as Belgium insists on an EU-backed public digitisation, rejecting exclusive access to a private company.
DAKAR, March 4 (Reuters) - A U.S. mining company backed by billionaires Jeff Bezos and Bill Gates is in a tangle with Belgium's AfricaMuseum over who should digitise antique maps of what is now the Democratic Republic of Congo in the museum's archive.
Mining startup KoBold Metals said it had offered to support the DRC in digitising the colonial-era archive, stored on museum shelves stretching some 500 metres and containing millions of documents that record how Congo's mineral wealth was mapped and exploited.
"We scan, we digitise the documents, and make them accessible to the public immediately," Benjamin Katabuka, Director General for KoBold Metals in DRC, told Reuters.
"This country needs more investment in exploration, and we need the data to be available to the public to make that happen."
The Belgian museum, backed by Belgian authorities, has refused, saying it already has a separate project with the DRC to digitise the data, backed by the European Union.
"We cannot delegate the management of collections to private companies; it would go against all scientific and institutional ethics," museum director Bart Ouvry told Reuters.
KoBold received permits last year to search for lithium and other minerals in DRC and struck agreements with Kinshasa to digitise data, including records held in Belgium, it said.
Katabuka said the request for access to the archive was made by the DRC government. "KoBold is coming to support the project, technically and financially," he said.
KoBold pointed to a 2022 Belgian law that created a framework for returning colonial-era collections to African states. However, archives are excluded.
Ouvry said the museum is working with Congo's National Geological Service to digitise and share the geological archives in a project expected to take up to five years. Data would be available in both countries "in accordance with Belgian and European law," he said.
Congo's ministry of mines did not respond to requests for comment.
ARCHIVE INCLUDES HANDWRITTEN, FRAGILE DOCUMENTS
Located just outside Brussels in Tervuren, the museum's extensive archive includes material that is handwritten, fragile and still not fully inventoried, the head of the museum's earth sciences department told Reuters.
Belgium's King Leopold II seized Congo in 1885 for his personal enrichment - the territory was plundered and the population subjected to extreme brutality. The King ran it as his fiefdom until 1908, when it became a Belgian colony.
Ouvry said the archives are accessible, copies can be provided on request, and private companies must supply a letter of support from the DRC government to view geological maps.
A Belgian government spokesperson for foreign affairs said the geological archives are a public asset. "Belgium cannot, under any circumstances, grant exclusive access to a foreign company or private entity with which it does not have a contractual relationship," spokesperson Florinda Baleci said.
Global competition for critical minerals is increasing and DRC is rich in deposits of lithium, copper, cobalt and coltan. The country's ministry of mines estimates that 90% of potential remains untapped.
KoBold is one of several U.S. companies expanding in Congo as Washington deepens a strategic partnership with Kinshasa to secure supplies and reduce reliance on China for materials needed for batteries, electronics and defence.
(Reporting by Clement Bonnerot in Dakar, Congo newsroom, Charlotte Van Campenhout in Amsterdam, Writing by Clement Bonnerot, Editing by Alexandra Hudson)
The archives contain valuable geological data on Congo's mineral wealth, crucial for investment and exploration, especially as global demand for critical minerals rises.
KoBold wants to digitise and open colonial Congo archives, but the museum says it already has an EU-backed project and cannot delegate to private firms.
Digitising these archives would enable public access to critical data supporting mining investments and exploration in the DRC's mineral sector.
Belgium's AfricaMuseum, with support from Belgian authorities and the European Union, is working with Congo's National Geological Service on this project.
A 2022 law creates a framework for returning collections to Africa, but archives are excluded; exclusive access to private entities is prohibited.
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