Highlights
• Kim Engineering launches the Kim-Box, a smart electrical meter built in the DRC.
• The device allows real-time monitoring of power use and protects against surges and short circuits.
• CEO Prisca Makila Biakong leads the project, hailed as a milestone for youth and women in tech.
On September 19, 2025, Congolese company Kim Engineering unveiled the Kim-Box, a smart electrical meter designed and manufactured locally. The device is pitched as a tool to help households and businesses better control and secure their electricity consumption.
According to its designers, the Kim-Box can manage buildings connected to single-phase, two-phase or three-phase power. It connects to users and energy distributors via the Login’App, allowing real-time, remote monitoring of consumption. This feature is expected to help customers detect waste—critical in a country where only 21% of the population has access to electricity.
The device also provides automatic protection against surges, short circuits and phase imbalances by cutting off the power supply in case of faults. This safety mechanism could reduce the frequency of house fires, often caused by outdated or poor-quality equipment.
Pre-orders are now open through an online form, although Kim Engineering has not disclosed pricing or production capacity. Behind the project is a team of young Congolese engineers, including several women in STEM, led by CEO Prisca Makila Biakong, described as the driving force behind the innovation.
Speaking at the launch, Minister of Electricity Aimé Sakombi Molendo praised the initiative: “This innovation falls under the fourth pillar of the government’s action program, which promotes youth entrepreneurship and values local engineering. We must support the production and distribution of such solutions to modernize our national electricity grid.”
Boaz Kabeya