The Jerusalem Post

French billionair­e Bollore brings electric hire cars to London

- • By COSTAS PITAS

LONDON (Reuters) – First it was pedal power; now Londoners are being offered electric transporta­tion to dodge their way around the city. French billionair­e Vincent Bollore on Wednesday unveiled plans to park 3,000 electric cars on London streets by 2016, as part of a car-share project that emulates the popular bike-hire scheme started in 2010 under Mayor Boris Johnson. Bollore, chief executive of the group bearing his name, which set up the Autolib electric-car-sharing program in Paris in 2011, said electric-car hire could help cut congestion and reduce pollution in the British capital. “Pollution becomes a nightmare... so many cities where you can’t even go out and the planes can’t take off, and you have to solve this problem,” Bollore told Reuters at the launch of the scheme alongside one of the compact, silver-and-white cars. Facing tougher environmen­tal regulation and growing demand for less-polluting cars, automakers are investing heavily in electric vehicles, but many consumers have been deterred by the limited distance that electric cars can go on a single charge. But Bollore, whose company has interests in transporta­tion, media and electricit­y storage, said the yet-to-be named car-hire scheme would be serviced by 6,000 charging points installed around London by 2018, up from the current 1,400. Users will be able to hire a car for £10 ($16.63) an hour, using a smartphone app to find a pickup point, then leave it at one of an unspecifie­d number of locations. CAR SHARE Already establishe­d carshare schemes such as Avis unit Zipcar, Hertz and independen­tly owned City Car Club only allow drivers to collect and leave vehicles at the same spot. They also use mostly convention­ally powered vehicles. Bollore said drivers would be issued with a card that acted as a key and recognized them, even rememberin­g their favorite radio station. He said 100 vehicles would be parked around London in the next year, with the rest to follow by 2016. The Bollore Group, which also operates car clubs in the French cities Lyon and Bordeaux, said it was investing £100 million on the UK initiative, with some £60m. to be spent a year on maintainin­g vehicles and running the business. In Paris, the car- share scheme has about 12,000 rentals a day with more than 4,800 charge points. It expects to break even ahead of its expected target in November this year. Bollore said he was planning to open his company’s first US scheme in Indianapol­is, Indiana, this year with 500 cars and 1,000 charge points. A lawyer by training and previously an investment banker, Bollore, 61, has become rich by taking stakes in troubled companies, building an investment conglomera­te from the family’s paper mills in Brittany, western France. Some Londoners, however, were less than impressed. “There’s so much traffic around that I think I’d spend the whole 20 minutes or so stood in traffic, so I don’t see the point of it,” marketing assistant Lucy Pearce said. Insurance broker Martin Parfitt said he would rather stick with a cramped train on London’s undergroun­d. “The roads are snarled up, and I think it will jut create more pollution in the city,” he said.

 ?? (Olivia Harris/Reuters) ?? VINCENT BOLLORE, CEO of investment group Bollore, poses in a Bluebus electric bus following a news conference in London yesterday.
(Olivia Harris/Reuters) VINCENT BOLLORE, CEO of investment group Bollore, poses in a Bluebus electric bus following a news conference in London yesterday.

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