Google Expands Kenya’s Accelerator Program, Donates $5m To Startups

This year, Kenyan startups have a new deal, courtesy of tech giant Google. According the company’s CEO, Sundar Pichai, during a virtual meeting with President Uhuru Kenyatta, Google will expand its Google for Startups Accelerator program this year by supporting 100,000 businesses and 15,000 developers in Kenya. Also on the table is a new $10 million ( KES 11 billion) grant package from the company which includes $3 million to support small businesses, $5 million for Kenyan startups and $2 million for charity.

Google CEO, Sundar Pichai
Google CEO, Sundar Pichai

“Thank you and your team for being very close collaborators with Kenya over the years. We started our journey some almost two decades ago to try and start moving into the digital world,” President Uhuru said to Sundar Pichai. “You have been a good part of that journey. A journey that has enabled many Kenyans through the use of technology and digitization to access financial services, knowledge and to enhance their business capacities.”

Google also intends to train Kenyan 29,000 students and 1,800 teachers on remote learning using its Google Classroom platform.

Last year, the east African country proposed a Startup Act. Although similar plans are already being mulled by other African countries, the new bill before Kenya’s national parliament, once approved, will make the country the number three in Africa with a Startup Act. 

Read also: Kenya Becomes Africa’s Latest Country To Consider A Startup Act. Here Is What It Looks Like

The latest move by Google is coming on the heels of the most recent shut down of the Loon project in Kenya. Loon is a subsidiary company of Google’s parent company Alphabet. Google’s intention with the Loon project was to supply internet from the sky to earth with balloons. President Uhuru, last year, announced that the Loon project would be commercially rolled out in Kenya this year. 

“When we unveiled Loon in June 2013, we meant everything in its name,” writes Astro Teller, in charge of Loon’s operations, in a long Medium article, bidding the Loon project goodbye. “It was a way-out-there and risky venture. Not just fragile-balloons-on-the-edge-of-space risky, but risky at the core of the question it was asking. Could this be the radical idea that might finally bring abundant, affordable Internet access, not just to the next billion, but to the last billion? To the last unconnected communities and those least able to pay?

“Sadly, despite the team’s groundbreaking technical achievements over the last 9 years — doing many things previously thought impossible, like precisely navigating balloons in the stratosphere, creating a mesh network in the sky, or developing balloons that can withstand the harsh conditions of the stratosphere for more than a year — the road to commercial viability has proven much longer and riskier than hoped. So we’ve made the difficult decision to close down Loon,” he said. 

What a flying Loon looks like. Loon has the capacity to supply high-speed internet on the go.

The Loon project was approved in 2018 by Kenya’s Communications Authority. 

Charles Rapulu Udoh

Charles Rapulu Udoh is a Lagos-based lawyer who has advised startups across Africa on issues such as startup funding (Venture Capital, Debt financing, private equity, angel investing etc), taxation, strategies, etc. He also has special focus on the protection of business or brands’ intellectual property rights ( such as trademark, patent or design) across Africa and other foreign jurisdictions.
He is well versed on issues of ESG (sustainability), media and entertainment law, corporate finance and governance.
He is also an award-winning writer

Kenya Google startups

Why Google Backed Out of Kenya’s Lake Turkana Wind Power Project

Renewable Energy Chief Executive, Sundar Pichai

Indications have emerged that the incessant delays in delivering on Africa’s largest wind farm, Lake Turkana Wind Project was responsible for the cancellation of plans to buy 12.5 percent of the stake by global technology giant Google. The Lake Turkana Wind Project which has a capacity to produce 310 megawatt (MW) of electricity was initially set for completion in 2017, after which Google made commitments to buy the stake from Denmark backed Vestas Group, however, sources at Google say that the tech giant became uncomfortable with the slow pace of the project and incessant delays, even though they are yet to make it official.

Renewable Energy Chief Executive, Sundar Pichai
Renewable Energy Chief Executive, Sundar Pichai

However, a Vestas source said that the delays were primarily due to the transmission line. With the pullout of Goggle from buying the stake from Vestas, efforts are being made by Vestas to enter into commercial dialogues with potential buyers of their shares. This, the source say is because Vestas’ strategy doesn’t include being a long-term wind park owner.

Read also : Nigeria Strengthens Relationship with Ethiopia, Signs Defence, Visa Waiver Agreement

The wind farm was ready for launch in 2017, but remained idle due to delays in installing transmission lines needed to get the clean power to the national grid and customers. The 428 km power line from Loiyangalani in northern Kenya to Suswa in Narok County was set to be completed by October 2016, but demands for compensation from landowners along the route and other issues delayed it.

The line was further delayed after a Spanish firm contracted to build the line went under. Kenya then tapped a Chinese company to complete it. The Lake Turkana wind farm is expected to provide 15 percent of Kenya’s total electricity needs.

Read also : Nigerian Off-grid Startup Daystar Power Secures $4m From SunFunder 

In recent times, Google has shown some hunger in acquisition of stakes in fields outside its online advertising business. It has also runs other ventures, including investments in renewable energy projects. It has invested billions of dollars in solar and wind power plants with a total capacity of 5,475 megawatts to generate returns besides contributing to efforts in fighting climate change.

Speaking on Google’s desire to invest in renewable energy, Chief Executive Sundar Pichai said in 2017 that “we became the first company of our size to match our entire annual electricity consumption with renewable energy (and then we did it again in 2018) as] a result, we became the largest corporate buyer of renewable energy in the world.”

Read also : Paris-based Impact Fund makes First Investment in Nigeria

Google now has an interest in 52 renewable energy projects around the world, committing more than $7 billion to construction that will create thousands of new jobs. Norfund’s stake in the Turkana power project was acquired in 2013 at a cost equivalent to 1.2 billion Kenyan Shillings. The project cost a total of €623 million $703 million), with debt investors providing 70 percent of the amount or €436 million ( $492 million).

Shareholders, including Norfund, the Danish Climate Fund, Sandpiper and Finnfund, provided the rest of the capital. The project has been credited with boosting Kenya’s electricity supply while reducing reliance on the more expensive diesel-powered plants that harm the environment through pollution.

 

Kelechi Deca

Kelechi Deca has over two decades of media experience, he has traveled to over 77 countries reporting on multilateral development institutions, international business, trade, travels, culture, and diplomacy. He is also a petrol head with in-depth knowledge of automobiles and the auto industry