The head of North Korea’s legislature, Choe Ryong‑hae, led a site inspection tour on December 7, 2025, visiting key industrial facilities including a chemical complex and a food‑processing factory. Authorities said the tour reflects renewed focus on boosting domestic production ahead of the upcoming party congress.
During the visit to the Namhung Youth Chemical Complex, Choe urged officials to boost fertilizer and catalyst output to support nationwide agriculture. He called on managers to improve production discipline and accelerate output under a “dynamic mass movement.”
Later the tour moved to the foodstuff factory in Unjon County. There, Choe emphasized expanding local food production and improving product quality to meet domestic needs. Officials reportedly committed to producing more diverse food items while raising standards.
Observers say the site inspection tour comes amid mounting economic pressure on the regime, including sanctions and resource shortages. As a result, the government appears to double down on domestic industry and agriculture to shore up food security and self‑reliance before the next major party gathering.
The chemical complex already increased fertilizer production earlier in 2025 and reportedly met this year’s output quota weeks ahead of schedule. Analysts believe Choe’s visit aims to reinforce these efforts and signal importance of industry to national economic plans.
Critics, however, caution that boosting output at a few facilities may leave broader structural issues untouched. Without major investment in technology or supply‑chain reform, gains may remain superficial. Thus far, North Korea has provided no independent verification of output figures or quality improvements.
Looking forward, the upcoming party congress may unveil a detailed plan based on results from this site inspection tour. The regime may prioritize chemical production, agriculture support, and food‑processing expansion — indicating a strategic push toward self-sufficiency.
The site inspection tour underscores Pyongyang’s continuing emphasis on industrial and agricultural output. Yet external analysts remain skeptical about whether this effort can overcome long-term economic and resource constraints.

