This project involves a simple solar photovoltaic (PV) assembling project in Kibera Slum, one of the largest slums in Sub-Saharan Africa. It is an initiative of Kibera Community Youth Programme (KCYP), which provides young people from the informal settlement with employment opportunities. Youth assemble small and affordable solar panels, which are then used by the inhabitants of the slum as tools for tapping clean energy to power radios and to charge mobile phones.This project enables consumers to utilize renewable energy instead of batteries that are harmful to the environment once they are disposed of. It offers great potential for enabling communities to maintain a sustainable environment through clean energy.The affordability of the solar PV panels, which are assembled locally, makes them accessible to low-income earners who most access news through radios in the rural areas of the country. So, even though the project has been undertaken in the Kibera Slum, use of the solar panels made there has spread to all parts of Kenya, and even to neighbouring countries where groups have requested trainings to undertake similar projects in their own localities.The project was initiated through the help of Fredrick Ouko, who facilitated the beginning of a technological transfer training through a linkage to a volunteer from the United Kingdom.