Burkina Faso has introduced its first fully indigenous electric vehicle (EV), the ITAOUA. Designed and manufactured entirely by Burkinabe engineers, the ITAOUA boasts an impressive range of 330 kilometers after just a 30-minute charge, as reported by the car manufacturer. The first two models of the brand are called Native and Sahel.
The production facility, situated in the prestigious Ouaga 2000 district of the capital, is the brainchild of a visionary Burkinabe entrepreneur aiming to position the nation as a technological leader in the region. The company emphasised, “Burkina Faso has just proven that innovation is not the preserve of great powers, but that it can also germinate, grow, and radiate from the heart of Sahel in Africa.”




Unfortunately that’s just not true, this car (ITAOUA Sahel) is a rebadged Dongfeng Nanobox EV, it’s not a fully indigenous EV, it’s made in Hubei, China; and based on a Renault platform, it’s basically an electric Renault Kwid made in China.
Dongfeng Nanobox 2024 review
This EV rebadging exercise likely has to do with a deal between Li Yubao, president of Yunhong International/Group, and Burkina Faso. Yunhong International is a Chinese special purpose acquisitions company part of the Belt and Road initiative in China. They already had deals going back to the previous government, and recently gave some EVs to Burkina Faso for their civil servants. If this rebadging deal includes a local assembly plant where the parts are built in China first before being put together locally, like it does in Botswana with the Skywell BE11, is not clear at this stage. The news articles say it does, but they also say this a fully indigenous EV, which is not true.
It is true that the indigenous label may not be fully accurate. However, this doesn’t mean that this wasn’t made in Burkina Faso as you later mentioned. This news expands on this: https://www.toutiao.com/article/7468169115267416595/?upstream_biz=doubao&source=m_redirect