The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
E-bike sales, sharing took off amid pandemic
Fear of public transit’s COVID-19 risks spur boom.
As with all bicycles during the pandemic, electric bikes, or those with battery-powered motors to handle propulsion, boomed. Market research firm NPD Group said sales of e-bikes grew 145% in 2020 compared with 2019, outpacing sales of all bikes, which were up 65%.
“Bike categories that catered to families and recreational and newer riders grew better than more performance-oriented bikes,” said Dirk Sorenson, a sports industry analyst at NPD, adding e-bikes “overcome challenges like big hills or going on a longer ride than a typical bike.”
But it’s not just consumer sales that have mainstreamed e-bikes. Municipal bike-sharing systems have increasingly adopted the technology, with some cities, including Charlotte, North Carolina, going with an all-electric fleet during the pandemic. Social distancing demands, the quest for safe and more accessible public transportation and sustainable travel measures have forged a growing adoption of e-bikes among travelers as well as local residents.
“COVID sort of propelled electric bikes forward by years,” said Josh Squire, bikeshare service Hopr’s founder and CEO.
Cities, bike-sharing companies and even a peer-to-peer bike-sharing platform (in which bike owners rent their bikes directly to users) are jumping into the e-bike ecosystem. Here’s how bike-sharing — sometimes called “micromobility” to include other small vehicles, such as scooters — has shifted in the tourism lull.
Virus didn’t kill bike-sharing
In early days of the pandemic, bikeshare usage stalled as those working from home stopped commuting. For essential workers who needed to travel, bike-sharing became an alternative to buses or trains, where they might be exposed to the virus by passengers. Lyft, which manages bike-share fleets in nine cities — including the largest systems in New York City and Chicago — gave about 30,000 essential workers free yearly passes.
“COVID was able to highlight micromobility as an essential transportation service, filling in where transit service stopped or where gaps existed and helping essential workers get to work,” said Samantha Herr, executive director of the North American Bikeshare Association.
As peoplebegan to leave their houses in summer, biking rebounded. In Honolulu, nearly 80% of members of the bike-sharing system Biki said riding was the safest form of public transportation during the pandemic. In Chicago, the Divvy bikeshare system recorded its busiest month on record in August.
E-bikes for the people
The electrification of bike-share systems, accelerating now, has been underway for several years. In 2018, the Bikeshare Planning Guide from the Transformative Urban Mobility Initiative, a global initiative on sustainable transportation, called them “ideal for bikeshare because of their otherwise high upfront cost to users, and they can improve user comfort by reducing often-cited barriers to cycling such as fatigue, sweating, and longer-distance or hilly trips.”
According to the North American Bikeshare Association, in 2019, the last year for which statistics are available, 28% of bike-sharing systems had e-bikes. It found e-bikes were used more intensively than traditional bikes, at a rate 1.7 times higher.
In 2019, when the Madison BCycle fleet in Madison, Wisconsin, went electric, usage more than doubled. Novelty was a driver, along with affordability.
“To be able to try an e-bike for a very low rate for a day pass is what draws people initially to try it out,” said Helen Bradley, general manager of Madison BCycle, where a day pass costs $15. “Then they get hooked,” she added, on the range of the bikes, which can go 30 to 35 miles on a full charge with top speed of about 17 mph.
Adopting e-bikes hasn’t come without growing pains. In New York City, Citi Bike introduced e-bikes in 2018 but removed them in 2019 after reports of brakes malfunctioning, causing rider injuries (similar problems forced Lyft, which manages Citi Bike, to temporarily withdraw e-bikes from its systems in Washington, D.C., and San Francisco). Last winter, New York reintroduced Citi Bike e-bikes, which reach top speeds of 18 mph, below the limit of 20 mph later set by the city for the pedal-assisted e-bikes. There are now about 3,700 e-bikes in the 19,000-bike system; the average e-bike gets more than nine rides a day, while the average for pedal bikes is 3.5.
Farther, faster, mainstream
Shared bike systems always aimed to go the “last mile” or fill the gap between public transit hubs and your destination. E-bikes make them more serious contenders as transportation options by going farther with less effort.
Lyft, the country’s largest bike-share service, added transit information on its ride-share app in 17 cities to better coordinate with public transportation systems, in addition to showing available drivers, bikes and scooters.
In Denver, users can buy transit passes through the app.
“We’re giving people a user-friendly way to piece together trips and allow them to explore a city that historically would have been much harder,” said Caroline Samponaro, Lyft’s head of micromobility policy.