Kenyan kitchens just lost a cheap, clean lifeline as a fuel startup blinked out overnight, stranding users and workers while finger-pointing over carbon money simmered.
Koko shutdown hits households
Koko shutdown hits households
- Koko Networks pulled the plug on Kenyan operations.
- Customers got mass texts warning of immediate closure.
- No public explanation came with the message.
- Users were promised follow-up steps later.
- Koko Networks sent apologies through SMS notices.
- Thanked users for backing the brand.
- Skipped details on why operations stopped.
- Left customers hanging on to refunds or access.
- Financial Times linked the collapse to government friction.
- Authorization for international carbon credit sales got blocked.
- Credits formed the backbone of the business model.
- Strategy unraveled once approvals stalled.
- At least 700 Kenyans face sudden unemployment.
- Shutdown landed without a transition buffer.
- Staff learned alongside customers.
- Employment losses spread across vendor networks.
- Koko ethanol fuel replaced charcoal in low-income homes.
- Reduced indoor smoke and forest pressure.
- Refills started around KSh 30.
- Vendors reached even remote areas.
- Koko Networks subsidized stoves and fuel.
- Covered losses through carbon credit revenue.
- Pushed cleaner cooking over gas or electricity.
- Framed the mission around fighting deforestation.