Kuwait Times

China scrambles to tame bike chaos

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Abooming rental bike business has flooded China's streets with packs of cyclists, but their habit of going the wrong way and abandoning their rides anywhere is causing havoc. The authoritie­s, scrambling to catch up, are considerin­g new regulation­s to curb the chaos-from capping the number of bikes to even barring people they consider too big or too small for bicycles. Unlike the docking station systems in cities like London, Paris or New York, the bikes in China can essentiall­y be found and left anywhere. From Beijing to Tibet, riders can grab a yellow, blue, green or orange bike by opening a smartphone app and pointing their camera at a QR code that releases a lock for as low as 1 yuan (15 US cents).

Once the ride's over, they simply park the bike and apply the lock. But many simply leave the bikes in the middle of sidewalks or abandon them haphazardl­y on freeways. The rules that do exist, are often ignored. This has culminated in fatal accidents in recent months, including the death of a child, spurring officials into action. In recent weeks, police around the country have impounded thousands of bikes that were discarded in piles. But companies plan to put thousands more on the streets.

Cycling boom backfires

"I like the convenienc­e of cycling instead of taking the subway, but the system backfires when the sheer amount of bikes causes traffic jams in some areas," 21-year-old Beijing student Zhang Wei told AFP. "Many people also don't know how to bike very well and it is annoying when they swerve around or cycle in the wrong direction," said Zhang. Some 30 different providers wrestling for market share have placed more than three million bikes on streets around the country, according to state media.

There were 18.9 million users of shared bicycles nationwide in 2016 and that number is expected to rise to 50 million by the end of this year, according to the China E-Commerce Research Center. With the patience of police and pedestrian­s wearing thin, some firms have appointed staff to patrol streets. Wearing armbands or neon vests, they stack bikes onto motorized trolleys to move them to places they are more likely to be used. But the startups, including leading rivals Mobike and Ofo, may soon need to comply with stricter regulation­s.

Beijing plans to limit the total number of shared bikes that can be on the streets. The lively Dongcheng district is aiming to create hundreds of dedicated parking spots that bike rental firms would help manage, according to the state-owned Legal Daily. The city of Shanghai is considerin­g a more drastic approach to limit their use: Barring people authoritie­s consider either too tall, too short or too overweight to hop on a bike due to fears they may be unstable on vehicles made for the average frame.

China's Ministry of Transport on Monday released a draft proposal on rules requiring local government­s to better manage the booming bike-share industry.

It calls for the developmen­t of dedicated parking zones near major transporta­tion hubs, shopping areas and office blocks, and advises local authoritie­s to make some areas offlimits for bike parking. It would also forbid children under 12 from riding shared bikes. Jeffrey Towson, a professor of investing at Peking University, said good rules would "shift responsibi­lity for handling bad behavior from the police to the bikesharin­g companies themselves." "I doubt the police will continue gathering thousands of bikes and putting them in lots," Towson told AFP.

Not suitable for children

The growing scrutiny partly stems from recent accidents, including the first fatal collision involving a rental bike in March, when an 11-year-old boy died after a bus struck his Ofo bike at a busy Shanghai intersecti­on. A month later in southern Fuzhou, a car killed a woman with such force that her bike shattered into pieces. Road laws in China already ban children under age 12 from riding on public roads, but state media reports say children are frequently seen riding the colorful bikes to school.

An Ofo spokeswoma­n told AFP the company runs campaigns to encourage parents and teachers to keep children off the bikes. Mobike says it requires users to register with an identifica­tion document before they can unlock the bikes. "We were the first in the industry to work with local businesses and regulators to develop specially designated parking spaces for our bikes... We have over 10,000 of these in China now, and will roll out thousands more in the coming months," a Mobike spokeswoma­n told AFP.

But Zhang Wenzhong, an urban studies expert at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, said companies are not using available technology well enough. "The government should require all companies to install GPS functions on bikes in order to meet consumer demands and control random parking, vandalism and theft," Zhang told AFP. Regulators in Beijing, Chengdu and Hangzhou want GPS to be mandatory. Mobike's GPS-enabled system shows locations of idle bikes. The company has a reward system encouragin­g users to ride bikes from low-traffic to higher-traffic locations. This month, Ofo rolled out a similar system. — AFP

 ??  ?? A worker stands next to a pile of shared bicycles at a repair center in Beijing.
A worker stands next to a pile of shared bicycles at a repair center in Beijing.
 ??  ?? A worker repairs a shared bicycle at a repair center in Beijing.
A worker repairs a shared bicycle at a repair center in Beijing.
 ??  ?? Shared bicycles are seen on a street in Beijing.
Shared bicycles are seen on a street in Beijing.
 ??  ?? A worker repairs a shared bicycle at a repair center in Beijing. — AFP photos
A worker repairs a shared bicycle at a repair center in Beijing. — AFP photos
 ??  ?? Mobike shared bicycles are seen on a street in Beijing.
Mobike shared bicycles are seen on a street in Beijing.
 ??  ?? Shared bicycles plate numbers and QR codes are seen at a repair center in Beijing.
Shared bicycles plate numbers and QR codes are seen at a repair center in Beijing.
 ??  ?? A worker climbs onto a pile of Ofo shared bicycles at a repair center in Beijing.
A worker climbs onto a pile of Ofo shared bicycles at a repair center in Beijing.

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