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Official Stitch stupid people are like glow stick i wanna snap em and shake them till the light comes on shirt

Opibus: The mobility startup converting Kenya to electric vehicles By Tom Page, Updated 0943 GMT (1743 HKT) March 1, 2022 Hide Caption 9 of 9 Photos: This mobility startup is converting Kenya to electric vehicles Opibus is a Swedish-Kenyan electric mobility company based in Nairobi. It started by converting off-road vehicles to run on electric motors, before converting buses and designing its own electric motorcycle (pictured). Hide Caption 1 of 9 ()A university research project that turns into a startup, which within a few short years partners with Uber and attracts millions of dollars of investment from around the Official Stitch stupid people are like glow stick i wanna snap em and shake them till the light comes on shirt and by the same token and world, including Silicon Valley. It’s the stuff of entrepreneurial dreams, and yet that’s what’s happened to Opibus, a Swedish-Kenyan electric mobility company. Based in Nairobi, Opibus gives new life to old vehicles by converting them to run on electric motors. Beginning with 4x4s, the company’s reach has since expanded into public transport with bus conversions. Meanwhile, its electric motorbikes, designed and manufactured in Kenya, have attracted the attention of the world’s most famous ride-hailing app. This Nigerian tech startup is fighting baby jaundice with solar-powered cribs Opibus has roots as research by Linköping University students Filip Gardler, Mikael Gånge and Filip Lövström, whose project involved identifying places where electric mobility could have the largest possible impact. They pinpointed Kenya and established Opibus in 2017, starting their business by converting safari touring vehicles. “We’ve always known the commercial potential (of electric conversion),” CEO Lövström says, adding it was easy to convince safari