Electric motorcycle riders in Kenya demand more flexible battery
networks
[February 07, 2026] By
ALLAN OLINGO
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — For weeks, popular Kenyan podcaster and radio
presenter Francis Kibe Njeri has used his social media platforms to
spotlight a problem he says many electric motorcycle riders face but few
companies in the industry acknowledge: batteries unable to be swapped
across networks and motorcycles that can be remotely disabled after
periods of inactivity.
Electric motorcycles, also known as electric mobility bikes or e-bikes,
are gaining ground throughout Africa, led by companies such as
Ampersand, ARC Ride and Roam. The continent’s largest e-bike firm,
Spiro, operates more than 1,200 battery charging and swap stations and
has deployed about 60,000 electric motorcyles, according to its most
recent public filing in late 2024.
Njeri claims in his widely shared posts that some operators’ remote
lockout features have rendered electric motorcycles unusable, stranding
riders who depend on them for their livelihood. He is among many calling
for more open, standardized battery systems.
“It is not fair that we purchase the bikes, but the battery remains the
property of the manufacturer, and we can only use their stations and not
charge them at home,” Njeri said.

EV bike riders take to the streets
Hundreds of Kenyan e-bike riders in Nairobi and the coastal city of
Mombasa took to the streets in November, chanting and waving placards
demanding more battery-swap stations and open access across networks.
“I lose up to 500 Kenyan shillings ($4.50) every time I can’t find a
swap point and sit waiting,” said Oscar Okite, a Nairobi-based rider who
has embraced e-bikes for lower operating costs but says scarce swap
stations limit his earnings potential. “We need battery networks that
work everywhere, not just in the city."
Electric motorcycles powered by replaceable lithium-ion batteries are
cheaper to use than gas-powered bikes. Most of these firms say riders
can save up to 40% on daily operating expenses because electricity is
cheaper than fuel and maintenance is simpler.
Yet there is still uneven access to swap stations, hubs where riders
trade drained batteries for charged ones in minutes. In Nairobi and
other urban centers, networks operated by Spiro, Ampersand and their
competitors have set up dozens of stations, but gaps remain outside
major corridors and in outlying areas.
“It’s great when I’m near a proper swap site,” Njeri said. “But go two
or three towns away and you’re likely to be stuck.”
E-bike ecosystems limit flexibility
Africa's electric motorcycle companies have mostly built vertically
integrated systems, where vehicles, batteries and charging
infrastructure are designed to work only within a single brand’s
ecosystem.
The latest figures by the Africa E-mobility Alliance show East Africa
leads with over 89 active e-mobility companies, followed by 46 in
Southern Africa, 39 in West Africa and 19 in North Africa. There are
only six such companies in Central Africa.
Most are e-bike companies, with 16% offering three-wheelers.
East Africa also accounts for mostof the e-mobility investments, at $207
million as of September, followed by West Africa at $173 million and
Southern Africa at $100 million.
The mainstay of the e-bike business is battery-swap networks, an energy
system that has proven effective in parts of Asia and Europe. But
critics say fragmented systems where batteries and stations are tied to
specific brands due to their proprietary technologies are hindering
growth despite supportive government policies.
[to top of second column] |

Men ride an electric motorcycle in Nairobi, Kenya, Thursday, Jan.
29, 2026. (AP Photo/Andrew Kasuku)
 “The lack of interoperability across
charging and battery-swapping stations remains one of the biggest
bottlenecks to scaling the sector,” said Eric Tsui, commercial
manager at asset financing firm Watu Africa.
“From a financing and consumer perspective, the worst-case scenario
is having many swap stations that cannot serve all riders," he said.
"We need interoperability so that batteries can be charged or
swapped at any station, regardless of the operator.”
Businesses say sharing is complicated
Sharing swap networks is critical for scaling up electric mobility.
But investment costs are high.
Building a network involves not just batteries and charging
stations, but also land, security, software systems and continual
maintenance. Millions of dollars are needed before companies make
any return on their investments. Standardizing battery sizes, safety
protocols and payment systems across firms also involves complex
technical and commercial negotiations.
Spiro CEO Kaushik Burman said he is open to network sharing if it's
done safely, pointing to battery safety standards set by Singapore
and India. He added that his company welcomes "manufacturers who
will want to build e-bikes that can run on our battery system.”
“Before we allow them in, we will integrate, test and certify," he
said. "However, openly allowing any battery to enter any swap
station without integration is a recipe for disaster which we cannot
accept."
There are signs of change
Ampersand announced plans in January to extend its battery-swap
network to other electric motorcycle makers, allowing compatible
bikes to use its infrastructure in the first such system in Africa.
“This open-platform approach means more manufacturers can enter the
market without the need to build separate charging infrastructure,”
Ampersand CEO Josh Whale said. “In Africa's e-mobility space, one
company often controls the bike and the battery network, but that's
not how energy markets should work.”
Ampersand sees itself as the electric battery “fuel station” where
electric bikes whose battery packs meet quality and safety standards
should be able to plug in, Whale said. E-bikes from other companies,
such as Wylex Mobility, can tap into Ampersand’s network in Kenya
and Rwanda, expanding access for riders.

The changes are overdue, riders say.
“It’s hurting my business when I can’t swap on time,” said Kevin
Macharia, a Nairobi e-bike rider who sometimes declines rides and
delivery requests when his charge is low for fear of venturing too
far from a swap station. “We went electric to earn more, not stand
by the roadside.”
All contents © copyright 2026 Associated Press. All rights reserved |