Berliner Boersenzeitung - Paris bids adieu to love-or-hate electric scooters

EUR -
AED 4.308166
AFN 77.493513
ALL 96.416224
AMD 447.045299
ANG 2.099893
AOA 1075.722267
ARS 1685.120948
AUD 1.758201
AWG 2.114493
AZN 2.015681
BAM 1.955123
BBD 2.358374
BDT 143.090483
BGN 1.954604
BHD 0.442184
BIF 3460.702414
BMD 1.173089
BND 1.514582
BOB 8.0912
BRL 6.345356
BSD 1.17089
BTN 105.690426
BWP 16.52821
BYN 3.435511
BYR 22992.545367
BZD 2.354975
CAD 1.614182
CDF 2621.853787
CHF 0.932647
CLF 0.027339
CLP 1072.497336
CNY 8.279721
CNH 8.273782
COP 4461.550927
CRC 583.100702
CUC 1.173089
CUP 31.08686
CVE 110.226856
CZK 24.227281
DJF 208.506957
DKK 7.469492
DOP 74.984371
DZD 152.147275
EGP 55.776628
ERN 17.596336
ETB 182.33418
FJD 2.665025
FKP 0.873747
GBP 0.876761
GEL 3.168098
GGP 0.873747
GHS 13.442348
GIP 0.873747
GMD 85.635638
GNF 10184.475634
GTQ 8.967897
GYD 244.935239
HKD 9.132281
HNL 30.827463
HRK 7.53299
HTG 153.345627
HUF 383.263446
IDR 19527.240315
ILS 3.753586
IMP 0.873747
INR 106.019684
IQD 1533.8692
IRR 49398.779765
ISK 148.207447
JEP 0.873747
JMD 187.594283
JOD 0.831683
JPY 182.756739
KES 150.999865
KGS 102.586892
KHR 4687.357948
KMF 492.697066
KPW 1055.775722
KRW 1731.561527
KWD 0.35981
KYD 0.975762
KZT 609.699012
LAK 25396.211572
LBP 104855.914324
LKR 362.104693
LRD 206.668482
LSL 19.829938
LTL 3.463827
LVL 0.70959
LYD 6.359772
MAD 10.770773
MDL 19.941099
MGA 5193.180751
MKD 61.566496
MMK 2463.801609
MNT 4161.388658
MOP 9.385052
MRU 46.416135
MUR 53.868474
MVR 18.077138
MWK 2030.388724
MXN 21.13483
MYR 4.797618
MZN 74.982217
NAD 19.829938
NGN 1700.592086
NIO 43.08509
NOK 11.824374
NPR 169.105201
NZD 2.016776
OMR 0.451054
PAB 1.170895
PEN 3.946434
PGK 4.96826
PHP 69.283242
PKR 329.319834
PLN 4.22776
PYG 8002.196711
QAR 4.267523
RON 5.090849
RSD 117.401581
RUB 93.700505
RWF 1704.302957
SAR 4.401882
SBD 9.655217
SCR 15.985985
SDG 705.628143
SEK 10.874453
SGD 1.514933
SHP 0.880121
SLE 28.255969
SLL 24599.088637
SOS 667.966001
SRD 45.26657
STD 24280.574864
STN 24.49142
SVC 10.245455
SYP 12972.465321
SZL 19.824055
THB 37.091875
TJS 10.795864
TMT 4.105812
TND 3.433212
TOP 2.824517
TRY 50.083471
TTD 7.94625
TWD 36.613871
TZS 2885.784946
UAH 49.424286
UGX 4163.559189
USD 1.173089
UYU 46.104046
UZS 14075.129263
VES 310.557571
VND 30859.280532
VUV 142.514088
WST 3.265817
XAF 655.727289
XAG 0.018305
XAU 0.000272
XCD 3.170332
XCG 2.11027
XDR 0.815514
XOF 655.727289
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.635057
ZAR 19.756169
ZMK 10559.204028
ZMW 26.843596
ZWL 377.734195
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    81.17

    0%

  • CMSC

    0.1300

    23.43

    +0.55%

  • BCC

    -0.7500

    76.26

    -0.98%

  • NGG

    0.0500

    74.69

    +0.07%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.72

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.1200

    23.4

    +0.51%

  • RIO

    0.5000

    76.74

    +0.65%

  • GSK

    0.4700

    48.88

    +0.96%

  • BTI

    -0.3900

    58.37

    -0.67%

  • BCE

    0.2100

    23.4

    +0.9%

  • RELX

    0.2000

    40.28

    +0.5%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1000

    14.64

    -0.68%

  • BP

    -0.3500

    35.53

    -0.99%

  • AZN

    -1.2200

    90.29

    -1.35%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    12.54

    -0.16%

Paris bids adieu to love-or-hate electric scooters
Paris bids adieu to love-or-hate electric scooters / Photo: ALAIN JOCARD - AFP/File

Paris bids adieu to love-or-hate electric scooters

Paris will on Friday become the first European capital to ban floating electric scooters from its streets, leaving fans desolate but relieving those who loathed their "nuisance" factor.

Text size:

Residents voted by almost 90 percent in an April referendum to ban the scooters -- celebrated as a win for direct democracy by mayor Anne Hidalgo even though turnout was just 7.5 percent.

The ban applies to rental scooters which have been offered by several operators since 2018, although people will still be able to whizz through Paris on privately-owned contraptions.

With complaints of users jostling through pedestrians on pavements or dumping their rides awkwardly at intersections, the city's 15,000 two-wheeled machines from providers Tier, Lime and Dott had turned into "nuisances" for many Parisians, Hidalgo said at the time.

But "so many people were sad" at the decision, said Paris-based American influencer Amanda Rollins, 33, who often gets around by scooter -- one of 400,000 people to do so in 2022, according to figures from the operators.

"They're just so much fun!" she added, while noting that being able to just pick one up offers "a really reliable way to get home... like a safety net" on nights when the metro closes before the capital's bars.

The day scooters arrived in Paris in 2018 was "like Christmas... it was like Santa came overnight," she recalled, praising their use for tours of the city with friends and their practicality when stopping for a swift Instagram photoshoot.

- 'Turn of the page' -

Paris "is a unique case" said Clement Pette, head of Tier's operations in France. "It's a major turn of the page".

By Friday, the Berlin-based firm had collected 3,000 of its 5,000 scooters, with growing red areas on its application's map showing parking forbidden in more and more of Paris each night as it loaded them into vans.

Only a small zone in central Paris will have scooters available until the wheels finally come off.

Like other operators, Tier's freshly-serviced machines will be heading to other cities where it offers scooter service.

Some Tier machines will remain in Paris' outskirts, with most returning to Germany or Warsaw, while Lime ships them to Lille, London, Copenhagen and German cities and Dott is set to send some as far away as Tel Aviv.

"We've turned the page on scooters" for the whole Paris region, said Xavier Mirailles, Lime's public affairs director.

Instead, like the other operators, Lime is betting on its fleet of 10,000 floating-hire bicycles, against around 5,000 offered by Tier.

- Mixed impact -

Removing floating scooters from Paris won't mean that they disappear from the capital's streets altogether, as many people have made the jump to owning their own -- or more exotic rides like electric monowheels.

"Shared electric scooters can be a gateway to acquiring a personal scooter," said Anne de Bortoli, a researcher at Montreal-based sustainability lab CIRAIG.

She highlighted that the scooters had begun to make an impact on emissions from Parisian transport in recent years, with second-generation models producing carbon emissions of around 60 grammes of CO2 per kilometre.

That was "more than a personal bike, the metro or suburban trains" -- the modes of transport most often replaced by scooter trips -- "but it also replaced some taxi rides and trips in personal cars", making for "slight gains in terms of carbon footprint".

"We have to change the way we get around as quickly as possible... scooters allowed people to access this mode of transport, to test it out, see if it met their needs. It often made people want to switch," de Bortoli said.

While the vehicles may have offered an environmental impact, they also took a toll on users, with 10 riders killed in France in July alone according to government data -- the country's heaviest-ever toll.

Announcing the figures earlier this month, road safety chief Florence Guillaume "strongly encouraged" scooter users to wear helmets, which have been made obligatory in some cities like Italy and Danish capital Copenhagen.

burs-ys/tgb/sjw/ach

(T.Burkhard--BBZ)