By Hakim Owiny
Kampala’s growing congestion, rising transport costs, and deteriorating air quality have made sustainable urban mobility an urgent development priority. While green transport solutions are frequently discussed in policy forums and strategic documents, the challenge has remained how to translate these ambitions into practical, everyday solutions for workers whose commuting decisions are shaped by cost, convenience, and accessibility. The Green Commute Lab emerges as a response to this implementation gap.
Green Commute Lab is a workplace based urban sustainability initiative designed to transform the concept of sustainable commuting into actionable, lived practice. Rather than limiting engagement to advocacy messaging, the Lab brings sustainable mobility education, practical demonstrations, and real world experience directly into institutional environments. By situating the intervention at the workplace, the initiative recognizes that commuting behavior is influenced not only by infrastructure, but also by employer policies, peer networks, organizational culture, and the broader urban ecosystem.

The realities of Kampala’s commuting patterns are well documented. Daily mass transit is increasingly expensive for households and heavily dependent on imported fossil fuels. Traffic congestion reduces productivity through prolonged delays, while emissions contribute to worsening air pollution and associated public health burdens. These impacts extend beyond individuals to businesses and public institutions, affecting economic efficiency and urban livability. The issue is no longer whether change is necessary, but how to embed sustainable alternatives into daily routines at scale.
Green Commute Lab addresses this need by focusing on behavioral transition rather than awareness alone. Through interactive engagement sessions, guided demonstrations, and direct exposure to sustainable commuting options including electric bicycles and other low emission alternatives employees are empowered to assess viable alternatives for their daily travel. The exercise facilitates dialogue on cost savings, time efficiency, health benefits, and environmental impact, helping participants make informed decisions grounded in practical realities.
Importantly, sustainable commuting cannot be advanced by electric mobility enterprises in isolation. Urban mobility transformation requires coordinated action across government institutions, private sector actors, development partners, and civil society. The government plays a central role in establishing regulatory frameworks, investing in enabling infrastructure, and providing incentives that reduce barriers to adoption. The private sector contributes innovation, capital investment, and leadership in integrating green mobility into corporate culture. Development partners offer catalytic support, technical expertise, and alignment with broader climate and sustainability commitments.
Green Commute Lab is structured as a collaborative platform within this broader ecosystem. It encourages organizations to move beyond sustainability statements toward measurable, operational action. Employers are uniquely positioned to influence commuting behavior through supportive policies such as mobility incentives, infrastructure provision, flexible scheduling, and awareness programming. By directly engaging employees, institutions can reduce emissions while enhancing workforce well being and productivity.
The first Green Commute Lab is currently underway at Jumia Uganda in collaboration with eBee electric bicycles. This pilot engagement demonstrates how corporate leadership can align day to day operations with sustainability principles. By opening its workplace to structured green mobility engagement and encouraging staff participation, Thanks Steven Lamony for setting an example at Jumia Uganda exemplifying responsible corporate citizenship in the urban transport sector.
This kind of partnership reflects a broader development oriented perspective. Sustainable commuting intersects with economic resilience, public health, and inclusive urban growth.
However, achieving meaningful transformation requires solutions that are accessible and embedded within existing social systems. From a systems perspective, behavioral change in complex urban environments cannot occur in isolation. Coordinated, multi stakeholder action is essential to move from fragmented efforts to citywide impact. Green Commute Lab offers a replicable model that bridges policy ambition with practical implementation, advancing zero emission commuting through structured collaboration and institutional leadership.
As Green Commute Lab progresses, sustained partnership and shared ownership will remain critical. Sustainable urban mobility is a collective responsibility that demands alignment across sectors and levels of governance. Green Commute Lab seeks to transform intention into impact for Kampala’s transport future.
The Writer, is a Governance and Community Systems Strategist and a Mandela Washington Fellow (2022).
Hakim Owiny’s work focuses on strengthening governance frameworks, advancing community led development, and promoting inclusive, sustainable solutions across urban and rural contexts.
He is also the founder of Edu Cycling, with the Mission to promote early childhood literacy for children aged 5–10 across Africa, and is actively engaged in policy advocacy, civic engagement, and systems thinking to advance social, economic, and environmental transformation in Uganda and the wider region.

































