Quick access to main page (top) Direct access to main contents Quick access to main page (bottom)

Au Revoir! Paris Votes Out E-Scooters in a Push for Safer Streets

Daniel Kim Views  

Electric scooters have officially been banned in Paris.

According to Time Out, 15,000 scooters disappeared from the streets of Paris simultaneously on June 1. This comes five years after France became the first European country to introduce shared electric scooters.

Electric scooter rental services in Paris have been popular among students and the younger generation under the age of 35. However, since its launch, the service has been at the center of controversy. The reasons were that it posed a threat to the safety of citizens and illegal parking damaging the city’s aesthetics.

To prevent accidents, strict scooter-related regulations were introduced three years ago, but their effect was minimal. Ultimately, last April, the Paris mayor conducted a vote targeting Parisians for the future of the city.

The voter turnout was low at 7.5%, but 90% of the participants voted in favor of banning electric scooters.

Existing scooter rental companies plan to rent bicycles instead of scooters. The French government also plans to encourage bicycle use by expanding bicycle lanes.

While some users have expressed dissatisfaction with the speed of the bicycles, they believe these changes will make the streets of Paris safer.

Daniel Kim
content@viewusglobal.com

Comments0

300

Comments0

[WORLD] Latest Stories

  • China Targets U.S. Tech Industry with Rare Earth Export Freeze
  • Porsche Taycan GTS Breaks Guinness Record with 10.9-Mile Ice Drift
  • Africa's MPOX Variant Clade 1b Reaches France: Health Officials Take Action
  • LA Wildfires’ Economic Toll Hits $50 Billion, Doubling Early Estimates
  • Real Reason Trump Wants Greenland and the Panama Canal: Geopolitical Dominance
  • Biden Targets China, Russia with New Semiconductor Export Limits

You May Also Like

  • 1
    Ateez’s Jongho unveils video for solo single

    LATEST 

  • 2
    UNC objects to push to grant S. Korea control over DMZ access

    LATEST 

  • 3
    VW stops production at German site for first time

    LATEST 

  • 4
    Park Chan-wook's 'No Other Choice' lands on Oscar international feature shortlist

    LATEST 

  • 5
    S. Korean ambassador to China urges deeper bilateral cooperation, exchanges

    LATEST 

Popular Now

  • 1
    [Kim Seong-kon] The clash of generations in 'Sword Snow Stride'

    LATEST&nbsp

  • 2
    [단독] 쿠팡, 3천300만명 정보유출 사태 미 SEC에 첫 공식 보고

    LATEST&nbsp

  • 3
    US job growth snaps back; shutdown distorts unemployment rate

    LATEST&nbsp

  • 4
    Seoul stocks open higher amid mixed US job data

    LATEST&nbsp

  • 5
    Ex-vice land minister arrested over favoritism allegations related to presidential residence relocation

    LATEST&nbsp

Must-Reads

  • 1
    Ateez’s Jongho unveils video for solo single

    LATEST 

  • 2
    UNC objects to push to grant S. Korea control over DMZ access

    LATEST 

  • 3
    VW stops production at German site for first time

    LATEST 

  • 4
    Park Chan-wook's 'No Other Choice' lands on Oscar international feature shortlist

    LATEST 

  • 5
    S. Korean ambassador to China urges deeper bilateral cooperation, exchanges

    LATEST 

Popular Now

  • 1
    [Kim Seong-kon] The clash of generations in 'Sword Snow Stride'

    LATEST 

  • 2
    [단독] 쿠팡, 3천300만명 정보유출 사태 미 SEC에 첫 공식 보고

    LATEST 

  • 3
    US job growth snaps back; shutdown distorts unemployment rate

    LATEST 

  • 4
    Seoul stocks open higher amid mixed US job data

    LATEST 

  • 5
    Ex-vice land minister arrested over favoritism allegations related to presidential residence relocation

    LATEST