Khaleej Times

Car-sharing firms rev up ops in Paris

- Geert De Clercq

paris — A string of private carshare operators are revving up business in Paris as the pioneering city-run Autolib scheme comes to an end and city authoritie­s promote car sharing over private ownership.

Last month, Paris ended the Bollore Group’s contract to operate its Autolib electric vehicles due to financial difficulti­es at the state-funded scheme. Its nearly 4,000 cars are set to disappear from Paris roads at the end of July.

“We will reestablis­h a car sharing offer from September and we will have more cars than we had before with Autolib. Paris will remain a pioneer in shared mobility,” Paris transport chief and deputy mayor Christophe Najdovski told reporters.

At a mobility event where car, scooter and bicycle share operators demonstrat­ed their services in front of city hall, car sharing scheme operators said they planned to expand their operations, but that growth would largely depend on how many dedicated parking spaces the city makes available.

US car-sharing group Zipcar, owned by car rental group Avis, has been active in Paris for five years and plans to grow its fleet from 100 cars today to 150 in September and about 200 by year-end. “The end of Autolib is an opportunit­y for us,” Zipcar executive Alexandre Schiro told Reuters, adding that usage of its cars has more than doubled over the past month.

He said it was hard to compete with Autolib as it was funded with public money, but the lack of parking remained an issue. There are currently only about 225 parking spaces for car sharing schemes on Paris roads, for a combined fleet of several hundred cars.

This forces car sharing firms to rent space in undergroun­d parking lots, which they say makes the schemes less attractive for users.

“Dedicated parking spaces on public roads are a key success factor,” said Nicolas Frasie of Canadian car share operator Communauto, which operates about 150 cars in Paris.

Najdowski said more car-share parking was being considered but he did not confirm earlier plans for 1,000 spaces by 2020. “We are talking to the operators about their needs,” he said.

Frasie said there was room for growth in Paris as the company operates 1,500 cars in its home base of Montreal, a city of 1.7 million people, while in Paris all the car share schemes combined have only about 400 cars for a population of over two million.

“One shared car can replace 10 private cars.” —

 ?? Reuters ?? The end of Paris’ Autolib scheme opens up a host of opportunit­ies for ride-sharing companies. —
Reuters The end of Paris’ Autolib scheme opens up a host of opportunit­ies for ride-sharing companies. —

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