The New Zealand Herald

Russian revolution shows the way

Moscow reveals how quickly drivers can make the shift to car-sharing

- — Bloomberg

When Evgeny Barkov owned a car, the 31-yearold software salesman would often look at it from his Moscow window with disgust. His vehicle sat unused more than 90 per cent of the time, while sucking up money and making him anxious that it might break down.

He finally took out a calculator, added up all the costs and determined he was better off selling his Peugeot and switching completely to car-sharing services such as Yandex.Drive, which offers cars ranging from basic Kia models to flashy Porsches.

“That investment brought me nothing but trouble,” says Barkov as he winds through Moscow’s snowy streets in a white Skoda sedan with a bright yellow stripe on the side and Yandex software on the dashboard console. “Now, I’m just paying for using.”

The venture — set up last year by a local internet company — flooded the Russian capital with more than 7000 cars to rent for as little as 5 rubles (11c) per minute, including fuel, maintenanc­e and parking. That compares to 41USc a minute for Daimler’s Car2Go in New York and is an offer too good to pass up for a growing number of Muscovites.

Almost out of nowhere, carsharing in Moscow boomed, with the number of vehicles more than tripling last year. The city now has the biggest shared fleet in Europe and the second-largest in the world. The rapid shift spells trouble for carmakers by providing a blueprint for how a deeppocket­ed technology player can move quickly to woo consumers with alternativ­es to traditiona­l car ownership.

“We’re approachin­g a point that could flip the entire car market on its head,” says Shwetha Surender, a London-based analyst with consultanc­y Frost & Sullivan. “Carmakers risk becoming mere suppliers to shared mobility services and losing direct relations with customers. That’s an unattracti­ve propositio­n.”

To be sure, carmakers are seeking to head off the risk. Daimler and BMW merged their car-sharing ventures to gain greater scale. Volkswagen is testing its MOIA ride-sharing service in Hamburg, while General Motors has invested in Lyft.

They all somehow missed Russia’s biggest city, with more than 12 million people. Daimler’s Car2Go, BMW’s DriveNow and Avis Budget Group’s Zipcar are all no-shows, even though Moscow’s notoriousl­y clogged streets — it is ranked as the world’s secondwors­t city for traffic congestion — were ripe for disruption and authoritie­s

We’re approachin­g a point that could flip the entire car market on its head. Analyst Shwetha Surender

were practicall­y begging carsharing companies to invest.

Paid parking was introduced in the city centre in 2013 and is generally booked via app — training residents to use smartphone features for their transport needs. A day’s worth of kerbside parking could cost about US$30 ($44.50), making it the largest daily expense for many Russian drivers. Car-sharing providers get discounted rates of roughly US$400 a year.

Yandex took advantage, swarming Moscow streets last year with vehicles such as Renault Captur crossovers, BMW 5-Series sedans and even Porsche 911 sports cars. Its aggressive investment made it the market leader ahead of local rivals Delimobil and BelkaCar.

At the end of last year, there were 16,500 car-sharing vehicles in the city, and Moscow’s Transporta­tion Department expects the number to rise by 5000 vehicles annually in the coming years. The fleet expansion trailed a boom in users as rides more than quadrupled to 23 million.

“Russia started car-sharing later than other countries, but due to this we were able to deploy the latest technologi­es,” says Anton Ryazanov, head of Yandex.Drive, which expanded to St. Petersburg in December. “Now, the Russian market is taken by local car-sharing firms, and the entrance of large internatio­nal players is unlikely.”

Yandex is Russia’s version of Google and has taken advantage of its strategic position at the centre of the digital economy to deepen ties with consumers through services ranging from shopping sites to music streaming. The company began its push into transport services with cabhailing app Yandex.Taxi in 2011, now Russia’s largest. It controls Uber Technologi­es’ business in the region.

Car-sharing is the next step in eventually offering a robo-taxi service — the goal of Alphabet’s Waymo. By starting with car-sharing, Yandex gets a pool of customers who could easily switch from driving the company’s vehicles to riding in them. The company also learns about managing and maintainin­g a large fleet.

“Right now, we see that use-case scenarios of taxi and car-sharing are different,” Ryazanov says. “But it’s clear that in several years, when selfdrivin­g technologi­es become widespread, these two services will eventually become one. You’ll have a choice — either to sit in the backseat and the robot will drive, or sit behind the wheel yourself.”

Like most car-sharing services, vehicles are booked via app. Yandex’s has a “radar” function that pings users when a car becomes available nearby. After Yandex introduced dynamic pricing, rates can increase when demand is high and vehicles are in short supply, but generally run around 8 rubles a minute for a basic car and 16 rubles for an upscale model. Costs are noticeably lower than in the US and Europe mainly because of cheaper labour, maintenanc­e and fuel.

There are also key advantages for car-sharing users like Barkov. Once a vehicle is booked, it can be pre-heated — a useful feature during Russia’s frigid winters. When he had his own car, Barkov recalled the nagging feeling of wanting to upgrade to a nicer, more expensive model. But now he enjoys the variety of driving a Russian Lada one day and a Mercedes-Benz the next.

“I only use cars for utilitaria­n reasons,” says Barkov. “There’s no difference for me driving a car with a cheap interior or one with all leather.”

 ?? Photo / Bloomberg ?? Moscow now has Europe’s biggest fleet of shared cars.
Photo / Bloomberg Moscow now has Europe’s biggest fleet of shared cars.

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