Paris stance: new e-scooters measures

Micromobility operators put forward new proposals for conduct in City of Light
Air Quality & Weather Systems / December 19, 2022
By James Foster
Micromobility shared urban transport Paris decarbonisation (© ITS International | Adam Hill)
Shared e-scooters 'used by hundreds of thousands of Parisians' (© ITS International | Adam Hill)

Dott, Lime and Tier, the three micromobility operators in Paris, have unveiled 11 measures to improve e-scooter integration, following a request for proposals by Paris City Hall.

The steps have been developed to enhance safety, integration into public space and sustainability: two measures - age verification and e-scooter registration plates - are already in place. 

Other measures include banning offenders who repeatedly violate the highway code; funding an experiment using camera technology to detect highway code violations; testing sidewalk detection technology to prevent sidewalk riding; and an education campaign produced by all three operators to raise awareness of highway code laws and responsible use.

The proposed measures also include the creation of a ‘micromobility observatory’ to produce independent data on uses and accidents, to be shared with city authorities; using technology to prevent overfilled parking spots and doubling the number of patrollers to move vehicles from full spaces.

There is also a call to finance infrastructure which benefits e-scooter users by increasing the fee paid to the City of Paris; plus price incentives to encourage users to choose walking over very short trips; and financing long-term rental of adapted e-scooters for disabled users in collaboration with Omni.

“Shared e-scooters now offer an efficient, highly regulated transport service which is being used by hundreds of thousands of Parisians,” said Henri Moissinac, CEO, Dott.

“We have listened to the requests from the City of Paris and believe that we have provided robust and effective responses.”

Dott currently operates over 40,000 e-scooters and 10,000 e-bikes in top cities in Belgium, France, Israel, Italy, Poland, Spain, Sweden and the UK. The company has won two of the biggest micromobility tenders in the world, in both Paris and in London.

This story was first published on ITS International's sister platform Electric Vehicle Charging & Infrastructure 

For more information on companies in this article