
COMPANY OVERVIEW
Created in 1869, the FINASUCRE group produces brown, blond, white and refined sugars from cane and beet, marketed in industry and large distribution. It also produces caramels and specialties. It sells renewable energy in the form of electricity. It produces alcohol, molasses, beet pulp and other animal feed products.
Through its subsidiary Galactic, FINASUCRE is a major producer of lactic acid and its derivatives, and conducts research into the production of biodegradable and recyclable plastics. The engineering and production of equipment for sugar mills completes the range of Finasucre’s activities. The group has factories in Belgium, the Netherlands, Democratic Republic of Congo, Australia, China and the USA.
The group operates a concession of 11,700 hectares under sugar cane in the Democratic Republic of Congo and owns 14,700 hectares of farmland in Australia, as well as 4,900 hectares of land with development potential.
Created in 1925 in Kwilu-Ngongo (Democratic Republic of Congo), the Compagnie Sucrière (CSKN) is one of Finasucre’s subsidiaries and is a semi-public company. where the Congolese state is a 40% partner. The country’s only sugar producer, the company includes sugar cane plantations, a sugar mill and a distillery.
SOLUTION
The Challenge
Between 2016 and 2017, Compagnie Sucrière – a cornerstone of the Democratic Republic of Congo’s agribusiness sector – confronted a devastating 31% collapse in sugar sales, plummeting from 101,218 tonnes to just 69,378 tonnes. Alcohol sales followed a similar downward trajectory. This crisis stemmed from three interconnected pressures:
Climate Vulnerability
Unpredictable weather patterns disrupted sugarcane cultivation cycles, reducing yields and compromising harvest quality. As crops faltered, production costs surged.
Economic Headwinds
A nationwide economic slowdown eroded consumer purchasing power. Households prioritized essentials over sugar, shrinking domestic demand.
Market Invasion
Legally and illegally imported sugar flooded local markets. Priced below production costs, these imports undercut Compagnie Sucrière’s competitiveness, squeezing profit margins to unsustainable levels.
The Solution
In 2019, AMSCO launched a multi-year intervention anchored in three pillars: operational restructuring, skills sovereignty, and community regeneration.
Operational Turnaround Through Expert Leadership
AMSCO embedded 27 international specialists across critical roles – Deputy Managing Director, CFO, Supply Chain Manager, and Plant Managers – to overhaul processes. These experts worked shoulder-to-shoulder with Congolese teams, diagnosing bottlenecks in real-time. One priority was supply chain resilience: optimizing harvesting windows around climate volatility and renegotiating supplier contracts to buffer import competition.
Building Local Leadership Pipelines
Beyond immediate fixes, AMSCO established a 2020-2021 training program focused on management and leadership. The goal? To prepare Congolese staff to assume senior roles. Expatriate experts served as mentors, transferring knowledge in financial governance, operational efficiency, and agronomic innovation. This ensured that improvements wouldn’t depart with consultants but would become institutionalized.
Community as the Foundation of Recovery
Recognizing that the company’s fate was tied to community welfare, AMSCO spearheaded infrastructure projects:
- Water & Sanitation: 22 hand pumps brought clean water to workers’ families and neighbourhoods like Tumba and Mvambanu, while dry toilets improved public health.
- Energy & Housing: Solar panels electrified areas near Kwilu-Ngongo, and housing with utilities was provided for police, teachers, and public officials.
- Education & Healthcare: Over 450 students received educational support, while free medical care covered employees and land-rights holders.
- Transport Resilience: The company maintained 17km of roads and bridges without state subsidies, ensuring supply chains and community access endured.
The Ripple Effect: Sustainable Transformation
Within three years, the strategy yielded profound outcomes:
Operational Sovereignty
Local teams now lead daily operations using transferred skills. Production stabilised despite climate pressures, and import competition was mitigated through cost-efficient practices.
Social Capital Restoration
Community trust rebounded as health, education, and infrastructure investments took root. Youth internships integrated 843 Congolese into the workforce, fostering loyalty and local expertise.
Market Resilience
By addressing systemic vulnerabilities – from roads to leadership pipelines – the company built buffers against economic shocks. Profits began funding further community projects, creating a self-reinforcing cycle of growth.
Employees
Turnover Increase
- Job Creation: As of December 31, 2018, Compagnie Sucrière employs 4,307 Congolese, including 1,572 permanents and 2,735 temporary employees (1,980 seasonal and 755 daily workers). As of December 31, 2019, the company employs more than 4,300, thus reducing the unemployment rate in the DRC.
- Social assistance: through its CSR policy, Compagnie Sucrière has contributed to improving the lives of the Congolese people by building social infrastructure, including access to drinking water, electricity and improved medical facilities used by employees, their families and land rights holders.
- Increase in turnover and payment of taxes in 2018, the turnover was 93.108.656.776,03 and the taxes paid to the Government of the DRC was: 3,371,946,988.93, compared to 8,134,209,040.28 in 2017, that is a difference of 12%.
Why This Model Resonates Across Africa
Compagnie Sucrière’s revival underscores a truth: sustainable agribusiness in volatile regions requires integrated development. Success hinges on:
- Human Capital: Embedding expertise while prioritizing local ownership.
- Ecosystem Thinking: Linking operational fixes to community well-being.
- Patient Investment: Measuring impact in years, not quarters.
For industries facing climate, economic, or market pressures, AMSCO’s blueprint offers a replicable path from survival to resilience.

