Abdihamid Hassan pitched the idea for Arda Link AI, that uses real-time satellite data and AI to protect herders in Kenya’s arid rangelands from drought and livestock loss. After winning the Red Bull Basement Kenya national finals, he heads to Silicon Valley to compete for $100,000 on a global stage.

What does it take to feed a nation from its driest, most neglected terrain? For the communities of Kenya’s arid and semi-arid lands, that question has never been abstract. It is measured in cattle bones scattered across cracked earth, in families whose entire wealth evaporates with a failed rainy season, in the quiet arithmetic of survival repeated across generations.
Now, a 23-year-old graduate from Isiolo County believes artificial intelligence can change that equation. Abdihamid Hassan, the fifth-born in a family of seven, has won the Red Bull Basement Kenya National Finals, earning a place at the global finals in San Francisco this June, where he will compete against 44 innovators selected from a pool of 100,000 for a prize of $100,000.
“I want to thank my fellow finalists because no idea was small. Let’s execute these ideas regardless of the outcome,” Hassan said.
His model platform, Arda Link AI, uses real-time satellite data and machine learning to monitor livestock nutrition requirements, track herd movements, and forecast drought conditions and pasture availability. Crucially, he said, it would be built to operate across local pastoralist dialects, making it accessible to communities that have historically been locked out of digital tools designed elsewhere, for someone else.
A Billion-Dollar Economy Built On Bare Ground
The scale of what Hassan is trying to protect is considerable. Kenya’s pastoral sector is valued at $1.13 billion, with livestock accounting for 92 percent of that figure. The sector contributes an estimated 13 percent of the national GDP and pastoralism employs 85 percent of the local population in arid and semi-arid areas. Roughly 80 percent of Kenya’s land is classified as ASAL, home to approximately nine million pastoralists whose herds supply the vast majority of the country’s meat.
And yet the industry’s vulnerability to climate shocks is existential. The 2020 to 2023 drought alone killed roughly 2.6 million livestock, leaving millions of people dependent on humanitarian assistance. What was once a once-in-a-decade catastrophe has become a near-permanent condition: droughts in Kenya now occur at least once every five years, a cycle that is tightening as temperatures rise and rainfall patterns grow more erratic.
“If livestock production in Isiolo County goes wrong, for example, due to drought, it can wipe out the sustenance whole communities depend on,” Charles Songok, head of WFP’s Isiolo field office, said in August 2025.
| BY THE NUMBERS | $1.13B | Kenya’s total pastoral sector value (92% from livestock)Source: Springer / Pastoralism Journal |
| BY THE NUMBERS | 2.6M livestock killed in Kenya’s 2020-2023 droughtSource: World Food Programme, 2025 |
| BY THE NUMBERS | 9 million pastoralists live in Kenya’s arid and semi-arid landsSource: Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems, 2024 |
The Platform: Satellites, Ai, And Local Dialects
Arda Link AI is designed around the three points at which pastoralist herders typically lose ground against climate shocks: nutrition management, movement planning, and drought prediction. By synthesizing satellite imagery with AI-driven forecasting, Hassan’s platform aims to give herders real-time intelligence before a crisis unfolds rather than emergency support once it has already stripped them of their assets.
The linguistic dimension of the platform is just as deliberate as its technical architecture. Many existing digital tools built for African agricultural contexts are deployed in English or Swahili, leaving out communities who speak minority languages or pastoralist dialects. Arda Link AI is built to operate across those linguistic boundaries, a design choice that reflects Hassan’s own rootedness in Isiolo.
“I also want to thank Red Bull Basement for this amazing opportunity, and being able to showcase the solutions Kenyans want, especially in my homeland in Isiolo County,” he said after his win.
That specificity was precisely what convinced the judges. Tonee Ndungu, founder of Kytabu and one of the four panelists, outlined the scoring criteria that elevated Hassan above 14 other finalists drawn from more than 3,800 nationwide submissions: “There were criteria we used to decide the winner. The first was idea feasibility and if it can work. The second was business impact and how it can grow. Then there was the founder profile,” said Ndungu. “The last one was concept uniqueness. It must be something that cannot be built anywhere else on earth.”
From iHub to Silicon Valley
The national finals, held on March 28 at iHUB Nairobi, drew some of Kenya’s most prominent technology voices to the judging panel: AfricaHackon founder Dr. Bright Gameli, Vivo Fashion CEO Wandia Gichuru, and Fatma Ali, a senior software engineer at Microsoft.
As the national winner, Hassan now enters a global pre-acceleration phase in the United States, during which he will receive an AMD AI laptop, $5,000 in Microsoft Azure credits, and access to mentors on product development, business strategy, and scaling. He will then represent Kenya at the Red Bull Basement World Final in Silicon Valley in June, competing for $100,000, an additional $25,000 in Azure credits, and mentorship from Red Bull Ventures.
The competition judges were clear that the work at iHUB should not stop at the podium. “I wouldn’t want to see the 14 ideas die, I want to see them grow and, yes, I would invest in them,” said Gameli. “The ideas can be built and scaled.”
Gichuru, who chairs Vivo Fashion and serves as a leading voice in African entrepreneurship, placed Hassan’s win in a continental frame. “This year’s competition highlights the opportunities we have in Africa. Every African country in this competition has the chance to showcase to the world what Africa has to offer and how it can use its own innovation to solve its challenges,” she said.
A New Generation On The Rangelands
Hassan’s trajectory is part of a broader generational shift taking place in Kenya’s dryland economies. A new cohort of young, educated Kenyans from pastoralist backgrounds is returning not to replicate the vulnerabilities of their parents’ livelihoods but to rebuild them with better tools. From fodder production cooperatives in Isiolo to AI-driven prediction platforms, the ambition is the same: to make an ancient livelihood resilient against a rapidly worsening climate.
The ILRI’s national livestock route mapping exercise, completed in 2025, which for the first time translated community knowledge of migratory corridors into comprehensive digital maps, underscores how seriously research institutions are now treating digital infrastructure for the pastoral economy. Hassan’s Arda Link AI fits directly into that expanding ecosystem of tools.
The Red Bull Basement program, which launched in Sao Paulo in 2015 and expanded to Africa in 2018 through South Africa, has become one of the most visible pipelines connecting African student innovators to global capital and mentorship. For Hassan, who graduated from Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology in December 2024 with a degree in Community Development and Environment, the road to San Francisco began in Isiolo’s rangelands.
The lights at iHUB went dark. The applause settled. And the conversations that remained were about code, capital, and the particular kind of possibility that comes from someone deciding that a problem this old deserves a solution this new.
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