Ogutu Okudo: Oil Guru & USIU Alumnus Who Became Trend In Bomas Chaos

Okudo is nonetheless known in the energy industry and the 30-year-old has held multiple roles in top oil companies.

Ogutu Okudo: Oil Guru & USIU Alumnus Who Became Trend In Bomas Chaos
A side by side image of Ogutu Okudo and chaos at the Bomas of Kenya on August 13, 2022. /VIRALTEAKE

The chaos at Bomas of Kenya on Saturday night, August 14 saw a number of politicians clash with police officers after the former disrupted the ongoing vote tallying process at the National Tallying Centre.

Nairobi Woman Representative-elect, Esther Passaris was among the highlights of the scuffle as multiple videos showed her dragging an individual across the hall before he was saved by police officers who separated her from him.

It was alleged that the individual was in possession of a suspicious gadget which raised alarm with regards to rigging suspicions. But during the brief action, something else happened.

A video by Citizen TV captured a man wearing a black cap appearing to have snatched the device from the official who then turned and handed it over to an unidentified woman. During the ensuing saga, the name Lucky Ogutu Okudo surfaced all over social media and was a trend for the majority of Sunday, August 14.

Viral Tea could not independently identify whether or not she was the woman in a cream cap captured during the melee at the tallying centre, nor establish her whereabouts during the dramatic clash.

Okudo is nonetheless known in the energy industry and the 30-year-old has held multiple roles in top oil companies.

She graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Foreign Policy and Diplomacy from the United States International University- Africa (USIU) in 2013 and a Master of Science degree in Oil and Gas Enterprise Management from the University of Aberdeen in Scotland.

Throughout her career, she has held multiple roles, including being an energy advisor at the county government of Siaya between August 2014 and December 2017. She was a board member at the Association of Women in Energy and Extractives in Kenya (AWEIK) for two years before working as a consultant at the Ministry of Petroleum and Mining.

Her real dive into the Kenyan government came when she was appointed the

CNN Africa Voices, who referred to her as “the woman on a mission to disrupt the energy sector”.

She has also been recognized internationally and is a recipient of numerous awards including President Kenyatta recognizing her in 2018 as one of the young female Kenyan trailblazers, being awarded the Under 30 Women in Energy East Africa (2018) and in 2019, the Kenya Upstream Oil and Gas Woman of the Year.

In 2019, she addressed the Economic and Social Council at the United Nations Headquarters in New York, accompanying President Uhuru Kenyatta as part of the Kenyan delegation to the United Nations General Assembly.