Kenyan Richard Turere inventor of the Electronic Lion Lights to keep Lions out of Cattle Pens

In 2013, as a 12 year old boy, Kenyan Masai Richard Turere  gave a TED talk about his invention at age 11 years old. He invented a solar-powered light system to keep the lions out of the cattle pen, as his family was losing as many as nine cows a week. With each cow worth up to $1,000 (£753) it was an expense the family just couldn’t afford.

“Lion attacks on our cattle were rampant and happened on a daily basis,” says Richard’s mother, Veronica. “After the lights, we had no more problems.” He lives in Kenya, in Nairobi National Park. It’s a park with lots of animals that roam freely, including lions. The lions kill livestock. So he say, “I grew up hating lions.”Turere, who took part in the Global Talent Search in 2011, tried to solve the problem.

It took a while for Richard to perfect his invention First, he used fire. But that didn’t work, and actually, “It was helping the lions see through the cowshed.” So he went to a second idea: a scarecrow. “I was trying to trick the lions. But lions are clever.” On the first day, the lions came, saw the scarecrow and left. The second day, they came and realized it wasn’t moving, and killed the cows.

But one day Turere discovered that lions are afraid of moving lights. So he got a bunch of lights and an old car battery, and the thing from a motor car that makes the blinkers blink. He set up a circuit that made lights flash. It worked: “The lights flash and trick the lions that I’m walking around the cowshed when I’m sleeping in my bed.”

Since then, no problems with lions. Other people nearby heard about it and had similar problems, so they asked him to install lights for them. Now it’s used all across Kenya to scare various predators. Because of this, he received a scholarship to the best college in Kenya.

Richard says. “I began learning about electronics by breaking things, I broke my mum’s new radio and she was very annoyed – she nearly killed me!” The Lion Lights system is now in 750 homesteads in Richard’s community and beyond, with the innovator making small tweaks and improvements to each version.

“I’m often called in to do maintenance on the lights because people don’t really know how they work,” Richard says. “They try to fix them themselves, so I came up with the idea of making the system automatic.”

Lion Lights 2.0 costs $200 (£150) to install. Half of the money usually comes from NGOs while the rest is provided by the herder. This version has 16 different flashing light settings and Richard’s latest update is a homemade wind turbine for days when clouds limit the solar power potential.

Richard’s community is particularly hard hit by the human-wildlife conflict. Sandwiched between the Nairobi National Park and the encroaching township of Kitengela, the “community lands” are only separated from the Park’s wildlife by a small river.

Every night wildebeest and zebra cross over to the community lands in search of fresh pasture – and the lions soon follow. “Lions are a big problem. It’s very easy for them to prey on the cows and sheep, especially at night,” says Reverend Calvin Tapaya, a community Maasai preacher and pastoralist. “But the cows and the sheep are our banks. As Maasai, it’s where we store our money.” Despite not receiving any government funding to date, Richard believes that his project is helping the Kenyan Wildlife Service (KWS), which runs the country’s national parks.

Retaliation: Killing of Lions. Lion Lights Tries to Prevent clashes between Lions and humans.
According to the organisation, Kenya has been losing about 100 lions each year for the last decade with just over 1,700 left in the wild. Some of those losses are caused by humans. In 2012, six lions, including two adult lionesses and two cubs, were killed by a mob after they invaded a settlement in Kitengela. Richard’s Lion Lights work to protect the lions from nearby communities, like his own, as much as they protect the community’s cattle from the lions.

“Since 2010 there have been more losses of lions from retaliatory killings than there were before,” says wildlife expert Lucy Waruingi, executive director at the African Conservation Centre. “There’s less land available to the Maasai and to the wildlife, so they’re coming into contact when before they didn’t.”

Right now there aren’t many alternative schemes to help those affected, let alone to try and prevent the clash between lions and humans, as Lion Lights tries to do. In 2014, the Kenyan government passed a law that included a compensation scheme for those affected by the human-wildlife conflict. But, in practice, only sometimes is compensation paid and there’s a backlog of claims.

“We have not fully implemented compensation of livestock, property and crops, because there are guidelines which have not passed through parliament yet,” says James Kitarus, a community warden at Nairobi National Park.

Excerpts:
1.BBC article: What happened to the boy who chased away the lions?
By Olivia CrellinKitengela, Kenya / https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-44398952
2. TED Blog article A 12 year old learns to scare lions: Richard Turere at TED2013 Posted by: Ben Lillie February 26, 2013
A 12 year old learns to scare lions: Richard Turere at TED2013

Kenyan Morris Mbetsa Mwero, Entreprenuer & Inventor of Drone Taxi, GPRS Mobiliser and Kinetic Energy Powered Tablet

Jun. 27, 2014; YALI visit to Chicago. Photo by Matt Cashore/University of Notre Dame

Morris Mbetsa is a Kenyan Innovator and Entrepreneur. Morris was raised in Mombasa, Kenya by his grandparents in abject poverty. Morris realized his interest in technology at the tender age of six. “Technology is my life. I never watched football while growing up. My room was full of electronics and wires,” he told Kenyan network K24.

Morris was one of 100 Fellows competitively selected to participate in an 8-week internship in the United States following the Mandela Washington Fellowship academic institute. He interned at IBM in August-September 2014.

First vehicle GPRS immobiliser
Morris developed the first vehicle GPRS immobiliser in 2009. It is a mobile phone-controlled car-tracking system He is fine tuning this invention funded by the Kenyan National Council for Science and Technology.

Kinetic Energy Powered Tablet for Students
Morris has also developed a tablet to be used by students and a device to tap kinetic energy to power them at Tafaria Foundation.

Electronically Powered Drone Taxi for passengers
made history in 2018 when he took a giant leap to the sky with a drone huge enough to fly passengers. The first in Africa.

The Kenyan Passenger Drone is a Vertical Take-Off and Landing prototype created by Morris Mbetsa, a self-taught inventor and electrical engineer. This drone uses four vertical propellers and is flown either autonomously, remotely, or manually with a joystick. The prototype used in the flight tests is not the final design, as the final Kenyan Passenger Drone will have an enclosed cabin. The drones can be used to transport tourists over and around Nairobi, as well as for search and rescue missions.

Burned with the idea of building Africa’s first flying taxi, Mbetsa would have to drop out of college to carve out a strategy for his amazing invention. He didn’t have the patience “to wait for a lecturer to take me through many stages for the next six years.” “That was too long,” he said.

Mbetsa then made the internet his friend, collecting enough knowledge and skill to realize his vision of building Africa’s first passenger drone. He later got exposed and had great training to refine his skills.

“I went to the Notre Dame University in the US for aeronautical training and later on, undertook my internship at the IBM Innovation Forum in Boston,” he told the K24 Tv.

Mbetsa began actualizing his vision after he noticed the people he shared it with – the developed countries – weren’t willing to share the innovation with Africa. They wanted to keep it, a proposal he rejected. The drone taxi is powered electrically and can carry one passenger for up to 25 minutes at a speed of over 120 kilometres per hour with an elevation between 10 and 30 feet above the ground level. “With this drone, you can easily fly from Nairobi CBD to Thika, you, however, need to be trained first and be certified to operate this drone, before you are allowed to fly it,” he stated.

In May 2018, Mbetsa began the unmanned flight tests of the Kenyan Passenger Drone, which proved successful, allowing for manned flight tests to begin in June 2018.

With this project, Mbetsa wants to prove to the world Africa can be home to technological innovation instead of waiting for what is done elsewhere. The drones will be specialized to the African urban and wild environment rather than western or far eastern cities.

Morris is the current CEO and Founder of Mbetsa Innovations Ltd, a society which assist young innovators to turn ideas into products and services.  He focuses on producing social uplifting and economic sustaining technology products for Africa. He is constantly expanding his portfolio of simple, inexpensive technologies because his country’s population continues to expand, creating new problems and deepening old ones.

Morris Mbetsa is the Chairman and Founder for Innovators Society of Kenya. As a Washington Fellow Morris Mbetsa seeks to use the Knowledge and connections he shall obtain from the fellowship to further his entrepreneurial ventures into Techpreneur by setting up Innovation and entrepreneurship centers in technical colleges and university that will offer both software and hardware training.

With the help of his other fellows across the country and continent, he hopes to transform the youth and empower them into self-sustaining individuals that can make a difference in the lives of their families.

Excerpts from Articles:
1. Morris Mbetsa Mwero https://www.irex.org/people/morris-mbetsa-mwero

  1. Morris Mbetsa; the 28-year-old Kenyan inventor who created Africa’s first flying taxi /MOHAMMED AWAL Nov 4, 2019 | TECH & INNOVATION https://face2faceafrica.com/

3. Kenyan Passenger Drone https://evtol.news/aircraft/kenyan-passenger-drone/