I am an Agricultural and Biosystems Engineer based in Nairobi, Kenya π°πͺ - one of East Africa's fastest-growing hubs for e-mobility and clean energy innovation.
My work sits at the intersection of renewable energy systems and electric mobility infrastructure - applying rigorous engineering principles to build solutions that are robust, scalable, and ecologically sound. At SafariCharge, I focus on bridging the gap between legacy power grids and the demands of modern energy infrastructure, designing systems that are both economically viable and future-proof.
| Domain | Scope |
|---|---|
| β‘ EV Charging Infrastructure | Smart CPMS networks, dynamic load management, OCPP integration |
| βοΈ Solar PV Systems | End-to-end design, grid-tied & off-grid, PVsyst / Homer Pro |
| βοΈ Energy Systems Engineering | Single-line diagrams, cable sizing, protection coordination, energy audits |
| πΎ Productive Use of Energy | Solar water pumping systems for agricultural yield improvement |
| π Mobility Data Systems | Data pipelines for grid reliability, charger telemetry & uptime monitoring |
- Deploying and optimizing EV charging station networks across Nairobi
- Designing grid-tied solar PV systems for commercial and industrial clients
- Building engineering analytics tools for energy yield and financial feasibility (LCOE)
- Developing data pipelines for real-time grid and mobility telemetry
Pandas Β NumPy Β SQL Β REST APIs
Engineering integrated systems for large-scale EV charging networks - from feasibility studies and power distribution architectures to real-time telemetry that monitors charger uptime and grid load.
Designing and deploying grid-tied and off-grid solar projects. A key focus is Productive Use of Energy - optimized solar water pumping solutions that directly improve agricultural productivity and rural livelihoods.
Building bespoke technical tools and automated workflows for solar yield calculations, LCOE financial modelling, and real-time system monitoring - turning raw engineering data into actionable insights.


