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Reading: Sierra Leonean entrepreneur to build the first ever electric shuttle minibus with spaces for persons with disability in clean energy push.
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Salone Messenger > Blog > All > Entertainment > Sierra Leonean entrepreneur to build the first ever electric shuttle minibus with spaces for persons with disability in clean energy push.
Sierra Leonean entrepreneur to build the first ever electric shuttle minibus
Africa News

Sierra Leonean entrepreneur to build the first ever electric shuttle minibus with spaces for persons with disability in clean energy push.

Sallu Kamuskay Sallu
Last updated: 2022/08/23 at 12:57 PM
Sallu Kamuskay Sallu Published August 23, 2022
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Sierra Leonean entrepreneur to build the first ever electric shuttle minibus
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Sierra Leonean entrepreneur James Samba has been working on collecting trash to build the first ever electric shuttle minibus with spaces for persons with disability that can accommodate them while in their wheelchairs.

During an interview with Salone Messenger, a public relations firm, James Samba stated “The Bus I am working on can operate without fuel or oil, can self-recharge itself, it also carry up to 10 passengers”

Sierra Leonean entrepreneur James Samba to build the first ever electric shuttle minibus
Sierra Leonean entrepreneur James Samba to build the first ever electric shuttle minibus

Salone Messenger reported that James Samba has worked on several projects including an FM radio transmitter, auto-intensity street light, non-fuel generator, remote control wheelchair, automated handwashing station, sanitizer dispenser, solar backpack, and has solved many problems in the communities ranging from light security, electricity, climate change, coronavirus prevention, to name but a few.

James Samba

James Samba is now going a step further to build the first ever electric shuttle minibus with spaces for persons with disability that can accommodate them while in their wheelchairs from scratch in a push to promote clean energy, curb pollution, address and create a better option to the high prices of gasoline that are relatively reflecting on high transportation costs, as well as the neglect of the physically challenged in wheelchairs in the public transportation sector.

Africa’s top producer and exporter of crude oil have heavily-subsidized gasoline and a patchy supply of electricity — a combination that might discourage anyone from investing in electric vehicles.

But James Samba, a 20-year-old student, self-taught Engineer, chief Innovation Officer, and founder of Wanjama Innovative-s. and resident of Pujehun Town, in the southern provinces of Sierra Leone is undaunted. He says rising global oil prices and pollution make electric vehicles a worthwhile alternative in Sierra Leone.

At a friend’s workshop, he has already stripped combustion engines from 10 mini-buses, powering them with solar batteries. The buses, which have been operating for just over a month, cover a distance of 100 km on a single charge, he said.

Like many innovators, James encountered numerous challenges trying to solve problems, speaking to Salone Messenger, he said

‘’The issue of funding has been the key challenge I’ve been facing lately. Getting materials to work with on a particular project is hard and many are to be purchased locally and sometimes ordered. 90% of all my innovative solutions are self-funded; I have to squeeze from my school allowance and sometimes even beg from friends and other relatives to assist me with some cash to buy the materials needed. ‘’Despite these challenges, James is hoping that his innovative ideas will make difference in the lives of people, he sees himself solving modern-day problems through his technology. This to James is his greatest achievement ‘’ My greatest achievement in the line of my work, innovation, has been, creating solutions to problems affecting people or more precisely, me being a problem-solver. With extreme gratitude to the UNDP Accelerator Lab, I have been able to learn more on my pace of becoming a real-time problem-solver through their funded training program on Innovation and Entrepreneurship at Limkokwing University. He noted.

His most ambitious project is building the buses from scratch.

In Sierra Leone, like most of Africa, electric vehicles have not yet gained traction because they are more expensive and there is little electricity and no infrastructure to charge vehicles.

Due to the electricity challenge, James Samba noted that the bus operates without fuel or oil, can self-recharge itself, and can carry up to 10 passengers, among other functions.

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