KAMPALA —
A solar-powered bus described
by its Ugandan makers as the first in Africa has made its public debut. Kiira
Motors' electric bus was displayed recently at a stadium in Uganda's capital.
Kayoola is the brand name for
the new bus, which is powered by solar panels on its roof.
It seats 35 passengers and its
maker hopes the Kayoola will become the first public bus in Africa to be
powered by the sun.
The engines of these
electrically-powered buses are completely silent, said Mario Obuwa, the chief
engineer of the project.
“This bus, there’s actually no
engine. What is driving the bus is a motor, a traction motor, which is being
run by a battery and the battery banks are the ones that are linked to the
solar system that’s on the roof. So we have the battery that is driving the
motor and that gives us a full range of 80 kilometers on full charge. And then
the solar panels come to supplement the extra mileage so it adds an extra
kilometer to the total,” said Obuwa.
The Kayoola bus can be
recharged using solar power or connected to an electric power source. Best of
all, it does not emit harmful CO2 into the atmosphere.
“The systems are fully run on
green energy so things to do [with] polluting the environment which ultimately
will affect us /// and that’s the reason why you would work on such a products
because in the future we’re looking at sustainable and green energy,” said
Obuwa.
This solar-powered bus also
helps save money on petrol by relying 100% on abundant, renewable sunlight.
Moses Kalule Waswa, chief
engineer of the technical team for the Kayoola bus, said the solar bus is as
powerful as any other.
“The difference between this
Kayoola bus, the solar bus and these other buses is that they are the ones that
are using fuel. This one is using batteries. But as you are driving when you
are accelerating, you can tell that it’s powerful like these other buses,” said
Waswa.
Ugandan authorities say the
Kayoola bus can help solve Kampala's traffic jams.
“The more options we [have],
we believe that it will help a lot in the issue of congestion,” said one
official.
The price of the prototype bus
is estimated at more than $140,000. If this model can be mass produced, the
price will drop and it will sell for around $55,000 each. However, before the
Kayoola bus is out on Ugandan roads customers have to be patient. There hasn’t
been an official date set for its release.
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