Washington Yotto Ochieng

Washington Yotto Ochieng is a Kenyan-born British academic who is Head of the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Imperial College London. Previously, he was Head of the Centre for Transport Studies and Co-Director of the Institute for Security Science and Technology(ISST) together with Deeph Chana. Ochieng is a Senior Security Science Fellow in ISST. He also serves as Director of the Engineering Geomatics Group and Chair of Positioning and Navigation Systems.

Early life and education
He is the son of Michael Yotto Amoko and Grace Akumu Yotto (née Radigo). He earned his BSc (First Class) in Engineering from the  University of Nairobi in 1988, before moving to the United Kingdom  where he studied for an MSc (distinction)  at the University of Nottingham. He went on to a study for  a PhD in  Differential GPS (DGPS) and fiducial network design.

Personal life
In 1997, Washington Ochieng married microbiologist and science teacher, Abosede Ochieng (née Salako). They have two children.

Research and career
Ochieng remained at Nottingham as a postdoctoral research associate after his PhD, before joining Thales Group as a navigation engineer. Ochieng joined Imperial College London in 1997. He works on the design and application of navigation systems, and hopes to achieve a truly global position, navigation and timing (PNT) system. Professor Ochieng works in the area of  intelligent traffic control especially Smart Intermodal User-Centric Mobility and how it can be used in security and  to regulate traffic in congested streets and railways, as well as in air traffic management  and maritime management. He has been involved with several international projects, including European Geostationary Navigation Overlay Service (EGNOS), Galileo, global navigation satellite system (GNSS) and the Single European Sky ATM Research (SESAR) joint undertaking. For the GNSS system, Ochieng worked on sensing, modelling of errors in the positional accuracy and ultra-wideband radio systems. He has been involved with the transformation of London's transport system and introduction of the London Congestion Charge.

He was promoted to a Chair in Positioning and Navigation Systems in 2007. In 2021, he became the Vice President of the Royal Institute of Navigation (RIN). His focussed research is into the development of tools that help to shape the thinking of societies in the design and building of infrastructure resilience and security; smart user-centric intermodal mobility and; Positioning, Navigation and Timing (PNT) systems.

At Imperial College London, Ochieng is part of the  Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) Centre for Doctoral Training in Sustainable Civil Engineering. He has advised on algorithms that can support the navigation of satellites.

In 2021, Ochieng was an expert witness on UK space strategy and UK satellite infrastructure at the Parliamentary select committee on science and technology.

Awards and honours

 * 1994 Nottingham, United Kingdom, The Leica Award for the Best Postgraduate Student in Engineering Surveying and Space Geodesy, United States. Recipient Best Session paper, United States Institute Navigation,
 * 1994 Best Paper – Airborne Detection of Calibration Errors in DME Navigation Aids, awarded by the Institute of Navigation,
 * 2004 Best Paper – Integrated positioning algorithms for Transport Telematics Applications, Awarded by Institute of Navigation
 * 2005 Imperial College London, Rector's Merit Award for Excellence in Research, Teaching, Professional Contribution and Administration
 * 2005 Best Poster Presentations at the 57th Annual Conference of the Aeronautical Society of India, Dr Abdul KAlam award – Best research presentation on aviation target safety outcomes, Awarded by the Aeronautical Society of India
 * 2005 Baltimore, USA, Best Paper – The factors affecting airspace capacity in Europe: A framework methodology based on cross-sectional time-series analysis Awarded at the 6th USA/Europe Air Traffic Management (ATM) Research & Development Seminar
 * 2006 Imperial College London, Excellence in Teaching Award
 * 2007 The Michael Richey Medal for Best Paper in the Journal of Navigation Awarded by The Royal Institute of Navigation, UK
 * 2009 GPS World Magazine global GNSS Leaders to watch
 * 2019 Harold Spencer Jones Gold Medal, the highest award from the Royal Institute of Navigation.

In 2013, Ochieng was elected a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering (FREng) He is also a Fellow of the UK Institutions of Civil Engineers, Chartered Institute of Highways and Transportation, RIN and Institution of Civil Engineering Surveyors.

In the 2024 Birthday Honours, Washington Yotto Ochieng was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) for services to global positioning and navigation systems.