Paris votes to ban rental electric scooters from city streets

An overwhelming number of around 90 percent of votes cast supported a ban, official results showed.

Paris: In a big blow to the electric mobility market, the city has voted to ban rental e-scooters from the streets.

An overwhelming number of around 90 percent of votes cast supported a ban, official results showed.

Paris was a pioneer when it introduced e-scooters in 2018, reports the Guardian.

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In a referendum organized by Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo on Sunday, residents voted 89 percent against keeping shared e-scooters in the city.

Paris has almost 15,000 e-scooters across its streets, operated by companies including Lime, Dott, and Tier.

The three companies will now have to pull their fleets out of the city by September 1.

Hidalgo, who originally welcomed shared e-scooters to Paris, has pushed for the capital to become a more livable 15-minute city, reports TechCrunch.

Hidalgo said that scooters are the cause of a lot of accidents and that the business model was too expensive to be sustainable, with a 10-minute ride costing about 5 euros.

According to reports, a 31-year-old Italian woman was killed in June 2021 after being hit by an e-scooter with two passengers onboard while walking along the Seine.

Dott, Lime and Tier said in a joint statement that the low voter turnout affected the results of the referendum.

Only 103,084 people turned out to vote, which is about 7.5 percent of registered Paris voters.

The ban will not have an effect on the e-bikes offered by shared micro-mobility companies, which will remain in the city.

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