Abdihamid Hassan will represent Kenya in San Francisco this June after winning the Red Bull Basement national finals, emerging from more than 3,800 applicants and beating 14 other finalists at Nairobi’s iHUB.
His startup, Arda Link AI, now moves from a local pitch stage into a global competition where 45 founders will compete for funding, cloud credits and investor access.
The win shifts attention to what happens next. In Silicon Valley, Hassan will be pushed to turn his idea into a working product while facing peers building across climate, fintech and mobility, many of them further along in execution.
Arda Link AI targets Kenya’s pastoralist economy, a sector valued at about $1.1 billion and central to food supply in arid regions. The platform uses satellite data and AI to monitor pasture conditions, predict drought cycles and guide livestock movement, while supporting local dialects to reach communities that often sit outside formal digital systems.
The March 28 finals brought together early-stage ideas spanning insurance, mobility, education and climate:
- Ridershield
- Senti
- Scam Guard
- Solarfish box
- Forest Pulse AI
- Shiriki App
- Visual Pulse Learning
- Arda Link AI
- Sign Vision AI
- UNYKE
- Bush Ledger
- Build Link Hub
- Anga Watch
- Neo Stride
- TowMate
Judges assessed feasibility, market impact, founder strength and originality. The panel included Tonee Ndungu, Dr. Bright Gameli, founder of AfricaHackon, Wandia Gichuru, co-founder of Vivo Activewear, and Fatma Ali, a senior software engineer at Microsoft.
“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,” said judge Gichuru.
Hassan now enters a pre-acceleration phase in the US, where he will refine the product, receive an AI laptop, and access $5,000 in cloud credits, along with mentorship on product and growth.
The San Francisco trip will see founders arrive with stronger prototypes, clearer business models, and sharper expectations from investors, raising the bar beyond what was won at the national level.
For Kenya’s cohort, the result is an early signal of which ideas are gaining traction, but it does not settle much yet. The real test is whether Arda Link AI, or any of the other 14 ideas, can move from concept to a product that users rely on and investors are willing to back.
















