At least in the short term, the Congo Territory cannot achieve self-sufficiency and requires substantial transportation of supplies from outside to compensate for the consumption of colonizers at colonial outposts.
Fortunately, there are plenty of indigenous tribes locally, and these natives can also serve as unpaid labor to help Spain better develop the local land.
After the establishment of the Congo Territory, this vast plateau land upstream of the Congo River became, in a true sense, the territory belonging to Carlo.
However, Carlo did not have the same brutal ideas as the historical Belgian King Leopold II. Belgium was fundamentally unable to control the vast lands of the Congo, leading the Belgian Royal Family's policy to have only one theme, which was to find every possible way to exploit the Congo, to earn profits from this land and bring them back to Belgium.
