Cape Times

Uber a transport service, finds top EU court

- Michele Sinner and Julia Fioretti

UBER provides a transport service and must be licensed, the EU’s top court said yesterday.

This is a potential blow to the US firm which says it is merely a digital enabler.

“The Uber electronic platform, while innovative, falls within the field of transport: Uber can thus be required to obtain the necessary licences and authorisat­ions under national law,” the Court of Justice of the EU (ECJ) said.

While the opinion of the advocate-general is non-binding, the court’s judges follow it in most cases and a ruling would mean EU member states can regulate Uber and other such companies as a transport rather than “informatio­n society” service. The case was brought by an associatio­n of Barcelona taxi drivers who argued that Uber engaged in unfair competitio­n with its UberPop service – which used unlicensed drivers.

Final ruling Uber, which no longer operates UberPop in Spain, said it would await a final ruling later this year, but added that even if it is considered a transporta­tion company, this “would not change the way we are regulated in most EU countries as that is already the situation today”.

However, such a ruling would “undermine the much-needed reform of outdated laws which prevent millions of Europeans from accessing a reliable ride at the tap of a button,” an Uber spokespers­on said.

It amounts to the organisati­on and management of… on-demand urban transport.

Uber, which allows passengers to summon a ride through an app on their smartphone­s, expanded into Europe five years ago.

But it has been challenged in the courts by establishe­d taxi companies and some EU countries because it is not bound by strict local licensing and safety rules, which apply to some of its competitor­s.

The advocate-general said Uber drivers “do not pursue an autonomous activity that is independen­t of the platform. On the contrary, that activity exists solely because of the platform, without which it would have no sense.”

Uber could not be regarded as a mere intermedia­ry between drivers and passengers because it controlled economical­ly important aspects of the urban transport service, Maciej Szpunar said in the opinion.

“The service amounts to the organisati­on and management of a comprehens­ive system for on-demand urban transport,” the ECJ statement said. – Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: EPA ?? Staff check the Uber Taxi App during the official launching ceremony of Uber in Yangon, Myanmar, yesterday. An EU top court found yesterday that the organisati­on is a transport company and therefore needs a licence to operate in EU countries.
PHOTO: EPA Staff check the Uber Taxi App during the official launching ceremony of Uber in Yangon, Myanmar, yesterday. An EU top court found yesterday that the organisati­on is a transport company and therefore needs a licence to operate in EU countries.

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