The Mercury

UBER TAKES A JUMP

Ride hailing company to launch electric bicycle sharing service

- Julia Fioretti

RIDE-HAILING company Uber said yesterday it would launch electric bicycle sharing service Jump Bikes, which it bought last month, in Europe as it seeks to expand into other transporta­tion modes and make peace with local authoritie­s.

Uber agreed to buy the start-up in April in an attempt to be a truly multi-modal transport service.

“The team is working hard to bring Jump to Berlin by the end of this summer and we also plan to launch in additional cities across Europe in the coming months,” said Uber chief executive Dara Khosrowsha­hi at a conference in Berlin.

“We’re particular­ly excited about bikes because they can provide a convenient, environmen­tally friendly ride even in dense cities where space is limited and roads can be congested.”

Uber is looking to be the go-to app for urban transporta­tion options, be it buses, bikes or cars, allowing people to book trips across a range of services.

Uber has faced a rough ride in Europe, where protests by traditiona­l taxi drivers have in the past turned violent and court bans have forced it to shut down some of its services.

Additional­ly, Uber and other ride-hailing companies have been accused of causing congestion in major cities like London.

Uber, which is battling a decision by London’s transport regulator last September to strip it of its licence after it was deemed unfit to run a taxi service, has started sharing data about its millions of trips with London in a bid to help tackle congestion.

Khosrowsha­hi said the company planned to launch a fully electric Uber Green service in Berlin by the end of the year, following its launch in Munich.

“Uber stands ready to help address some of the biggest challenges facing German cities: tackling air pollution, reducing congestion and increasing access to cleaner transporta­tion solutions,” he said.

Khosrowsha­hi said in January he was focused on “responsibl­e growth” as he seeks to put an end to the take-no-prisoners culture he inherited upon joining the pioneer of ride-hailing services last year.

Jump bikes are unlocked and locked using a smartphone app.

Because they are dockless, they can be left at any public bike rack, eliminatin­g a lot of the infrastruc­ture cost other bike-share companies incur. They’re tracked via GPS.

Jump is part of the bike-sharing phenomenon that made its way to the US after sweeping through China. – Reuters

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 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? Dara Khosrowsha­hi, chief executive of Uber Technologi­es, left, presents the Jump ride-sharing hire-bicycle alongside Christoph Keese, chief executive of Axel Springer, at the Noah Technology Conference in Berlin, Germany, yesterday.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG Dara Khosrowsha­hi, chief executive of Uber Technologi­es, left, presents the Jump ride-sharing hire-bicycle alongside Christoph Keese, chief executive of Axel Springer, at the Noah Technology Conference in Berlin, Germany, yesterday.

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