Manila Bulletin

Madrid bans electric scooters from streets

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MADRID (AFP) – Madrid's city hall said Tuesday it had refused to grant a license to three electric scooter-share companies and gave them 72 hours to remove their scooters from the streets of the Spanish capital.

The city justified the move on the grounds that Lime, Wind and VOI were not doing enough to inform people of their usage rules.

Lime, which is partly owned by ridehailin­g Uber and Google parent company Alphabet, and the other two firms distribute­d electric scooters across the capital earlier this year without official authorizat­ion.

Their arrival has forced Madrid and other Spanish cities to regulate the new trend.

In the capital, the scooters are banned on pavements and in pedestrian zones but authorized on all roads where the speed limit is 30 kilometers (19 miles) an hour – a limit implemente­d recently on 80 percent of the city's streets.

The three companies can ''at any moment'' submit a new request for a license, Madrid's city hall said in a statement Tuesday, adding that a total of 18 companies have expressed interest in providing the service.

Contacted by AFP, California-based start-up Lime which has distribute­d the most scooters in Madrid, did not immediatel­y react to the city's decision.

Barcelona, Spain's second-largest city which is overwhelme­d by mass tourism, already bans the use of shared electric scooters. Under its rules, anyone paying to use a scooter must be accompanie­d by a guide.

Similar electric scooter-sharing programs have been introduced in other European cities including Paris, Vienna and Zurich.

Unlike schemes involving shared bicycles that typically must be left in docking stations, the scooters are dockless, leaving riders responsibl­e for parking them securely.

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