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PMDs Japan ~ Why No Public Outcry like Sinkieland...

AhMeng

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SHARING ECONOMY
E-scooters roll into Japan for last-mile rides

Insiders call for common sense in regulation of potential $500bn industry
TOSHIHIDE TAKEDA, Nikkei staff writerJUNE 25, 2019 15:26 JST

https%3A%2F%2Fs3-ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com%2Fpsh-ex-ftnikkei-3937bb4%2Fimages%2F7%2F8%2F5%2F1%2F21381587-1-eng-GB%2F%E3%81%97%E3%81%8B%E3%81%91%E5%86%99%E7%9C%9F1%E6%A1%882%20%20XaaSM2%E2%91%A2%E3%83%9E%E3%82%A4%E3%82%AF%E3%83%AD%E3%83%A2%E3%83%93%E3%83%AA%E3%83%86%E3%82%A3%E3%83%BC20190623161204648_Data_2048x1152.jpg

A rider uses a Wind Mobility electric scooter outside Urawa-misono train station in Saitama, the only place the devices are available in Japan. (Photo by Toshihide Takeda)

TOKYO -- E-scooters have zoomed into the spotlight around the world over the past two or three years. In the U.S., the trend has helped scooter-sharing startups such as Bird and Lime achieve unicorn status.

Now the compact conveyance has arrived in one corner of Japan: Urawa-misono Station in Saitama, a 50-minute underground train ride north of Tokyo.

Ten scooters are lined up at an eye-catching spot outside the ticket gate, where they can be unlocked with a smartphone app. Users can borrow helmets from the station before they ride off.

The rider puts one foot on the board and kicks off two or three times with the other, after which the scooter propels itself forward at up to 19 kph. It is controlled with an accelerator on the right handlebar and a brake on the left.

The e-scooters are provided by Wind Mobility Japan, the local arm of Berlin-based Wind Mobility, which operates in 17 mainly European cities. The service, which rolled out March 29, had just over 300 registered members at the end of May.

https%3A%2F%2Fs3-ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com%2Fpsh-ex-ftnikkei-3937bb4%2Fimages%2F_aliases%2Farticleimage%2F8%2F3%2F6%2F1%2F21381638-1-eng-GB%2F%E3%81%97%E3%81%8B%E3%81%91%E5%86%99%E7%9C%9F3%20XaaSM2%E2%91%A2%E3%83%9E%E3%82%A4%E3%82%AF%E3%83%AD%E3%83%A2%E3%83%93%E3%83%AA%E3%83%86%E3%82%A3%E3%83%BC20190623161250116_Data_2048x1152.jpg

About 10 e-scooters are parked by the ticket gate, where riders can also borrow helmets. (Photo by Toshihide Takeda)

It costs 100 yen (about $1) to unlock a scooter and 25 yen per minute thereafter, on par with rates overseas. Since rides last about half an hour on average, the company is considering giving riders the option to pay by the hour or the day. It also looks to add more scooter bases at other train stations and downtown.

Management consultancy McKinsey & Company estimates that the overall "shared micromobility" market -- which includes e-scooters, bike-sharing services and the like -- in the U.S., Europe and China could reach a total of $500 billion.

Yet e-scooters have been the subject of much controversy overseas, where reckless driving and devices left lying on sidewalks have caused accidents and angered locals.


Germany and France are imposing tougher regulations on electric scooters, barring the vehicles from sidewalks, while some U.S. cities have outright banned e-scooters or imposed moratoriums on their use.

Wind's Japanese service has reportedly avoided such issues so far, with no accidents or complaints from residents.

Wind had hoped to partner with railway operators but initially thought doing so might be too difficult. But Saitama Railway took a liking to the scooters at a demonstration event last November, and its support helped Wind get the service off the ground.

Saitama Railway already had the groundwork laid for such a partnership, according to the head of its corporate planning department. The company is actively seeking out new forms of transportation with an eye toward development along its train line to Tokyo, and it had already worked with the city government and police department on testing electric buses, for example.

https%3A%2F%2Fs3-ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com%2Fpsh-ex-ftnikkei-3937bb4%2Fimages%2F_aliases%2Farticleimage%2F9%2F8%2F6%2F1%2F21381689-1-eng-GB%2F%E3%81%97%E3%81%8B%E3%81%91%E5%86%99%E7%9C%9F2%E6%A1%881%20%20XaaSM2%E2%91%A2%E3%83%9E%E3%82%A4%E3%82%AF%E3%83%AD%E3%83%A2%E3%83%93%E3%83%AA%E3%83%86%E3%82%A3%E3%83%BC20190623161320147_Data_2048x1152.jpg

E-scooters are are treated as motorized bikes in Japan, meaning they must have license plates and side mirrors. (Photo by Toshihide Takeda)

The scooters at Urawa-misono are treated as motorized bicycles under Japanese traffic law, based on a 2002 notice from the National Police Agency. This means they must be equipped with license plates and side mirrors and require a driver's license to operate. They also have to be driven on the road alongside cars.

The same goes for any form of transportation with a battery, including other micromobility options such as unicycles. This policy has had unintended consequences, blocking seniors who have surrendered their licenses from using electric schooters as an alternative to cars.

"The regulations should be in keeping with the reality of" how e-scooters are used, argues Daiki Okai, head of Luup, a Tokyo-based electric-scooter startup.

He contends that it is illogical to paint all motor-powered vehicles with the same brush "even if they can go only 10 kilometers an hour."

Okai is taking action to change this. In May, he partnered with AnyPay -- another scooter-sharing company planning tests in the city of Fukuoka -- and Yahoo Japan subsidiary Z Corp. to set up a group promoting micromobility solutions. The group will start by drawing up a self-regulatory framework for the industry this year.

Wind e-scooters can be locked and unlocked via the company's app. (Photo by Toshihide Takeda)

The aim is to craft rules suited to Japan while avoiding a repeat of the backlash that e-scooters have faced abroad. The group will also look to expand tests to other interested cities.
 

AhMeng

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Mobility devices will be successful in Japan because Japanese are gracious people, unlike low SES crass, crude, fuckkien, fuckka, cuntonese, tiuchiew speaking sinkies.

It further proves my point that Tommy and Donald are spot on on fuckup useless self entitled Sinkies. Their genes kill every innovation.
 

tanwahtiu

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Loyal
Blame Form 5 jiuhu kia.....no NSF and steal jobs from Sinkies....

Mobility devices will be successful in Japan because Japanese are gracious people, unlike low SES crass, crude, fuckkien, fuckka, cuntonese, tiuchiew speaking sinkies.

It further proves my point that Tommy and Donald are spot on on fuckup useless self entitled Sinkies. Their genes kill every innovation.
 

AhMeng

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Koreans embrace personal mobility devices
  • ASEAN+
  • Saturday, 25 Aug 2018
    12:00 AM MYT
image: https://media.thestar.com.my/Prod/5DEB83A4-9F58-408A-932E-2EF65DCAD93E
5DEB83A4-9F58-408A-932E-2EF65DCAD93E

Urban travel: Many South Koreans view electric scooters as an effective way to commute. — AFP

SEONGNAM: Whizzing to work on electric scooters seems to be the popular thing in Pangyo, a tech-savvy neighbourhood south of Seoul known for its quickness to adopt new technologies and trends.

Five months into scootering to work, Kim is beyond satisfied with his purchase and is convinced that e-scooters are the way to go for short-distance travel.

“Unless it’s raining, I take my scooter (a Segway Ninebot ES2) to work every day, travelling on the bicycle paths in the parks stretching through Bundang,” Kim told The Korea Herald.

“Riding an e-scooter saves daily transportation costs. All I need to do is charge the device at home with electricity. Now it only takes around 15 minutes to get to work, compared to 30 minutes stuck on a bus during rush hour.”

Kim is just one of many South Koreans who view electric scooters as an effective way to commute to and from work or school. Together with recreational riders, e-mobility users like Kim are fuelling the popularity of personal mobility devices (PMDs) here.

PMDs refer to motorised, one-person vehicles powered by electricity, including standing electric scooters, two-wheeled Segways, hands-free hoverboards and electric bikes.

They can travel at a maximum speed of 20-40kph. A standard e-scooter costs around 500,000 won (RM1,826) at local retail prices.

And demand for PMDs is growing. According to the Korea Transport Institute (KTI), approximately 75,000 PMDs were sold here in 2017, up 20% from 60,000 units the previous year. By 2022, this number is expected to surpass 200,000 units, according to the institute.

Though PMDs first garnered interest as recreational devices in South Korea, they are now perceived more as practical vehicles for commuting.

In a 2017 KTI survey of 150 personal mobility device users, 55.3% said they used PMDs to commute to work or school, exceeding those who used them for recreational purposes (46.7%).

Despite the growth, the regulations surrounding PMDs have been ambiguous, if not absent, leading to safety risks and widespread confusion among scooter riders, cars and pedestrians.

In South Korea, most people ride their e-scooters on sidewalks or in a bike lane when available. Many ride them at public parks. Most do not wear helmets and few are seen riding in the streets.

But this is all illegal, according to Korea’s transport regulations.

The Road Traffic Act categorises PMDs as motorbikes, treating them like a standard motorcycle. This means the legal way to ride a PMD here is to stay in regular car lanes and wear a helmet. The rider must also be over the age of 16 and hold a two-wheeled motor vehicle driving licence.

Most e-mobility riders don’t follow these rules, largely because they are unaware.

Enforcement has been weak, with surveillance mostly limited to sporadic inspections at Seoul parks.

This legal stipulation itself is self-contradictory. While PMDs are required to travel within car lanes, there is no law mandating e-mobility devices to obtain the governmental safety certification required of all vehicles on the roads.

Legal issues aside, experts warn that it is realistically dangerous to send e-scooter riders to the roads to travel next to regular cars that are going at much higher speeds.

Personal mobility devices are here and growing in scope, but the regulations are not keeping pace, hurting both the industry and PMD riding culture, said Kim Pil-su, an automotive engineering professor at Daelim University and chairman of the Korea Electric Vehicle Association.

The government needs to legislate clear rules on travel speed, permitted locations and driving qualifications for PMD vehicles by benchmarking successful models from overseas. — The Korea Herald / Asia News Network

Read more at https://www.thestar.com.my/news/reg...personal-mobility-devices#rDkELuzdvODoULLs.99
 

AhMeng

Alfrescian (Inf- Comp)
Asset
The Road Traffic Act categorises PMDs as motorbikes, treating them like a standard motorcycle. This means the legal way to ride a PMD here is to stay in regular car lanes and wear a helmet. The rider must also be over the age of 16 and hold a two-wheeled motor vehicle driving licence.

Even Korean Government, which probably cost much less than our multi million PAP Ministers, shows competency and logic in passing sensible laws governing these PMDs!

It proves my point again that PAP MINISTERS are overpaid and incompetent.
 

AhMeng

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The whole PMD saga proves another point!

Chinks needs CONTROL AND AUTHORITARIANISM. They do not have self discipline and cannot appreciate freedom. Look no further than Hongkanland. Give them 50 years of freedom one country two system, they rather abuse it than treasure it. I rest my case! :biggrin:
 

AhMeng

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Asset
PRC had been using electric scooters on their roads over a decade if I recalled correctly.
In fact, I have one some 15 years ago. First to buy in those days when the battery was still Nicad. Short battery life. Used to play it at East Coast. I was fucking houlian when I ride past those bikees. :biggrin:
 

ChristJohnny

Alfrescian
Loyal
It is not the device fault. There are many road accidents everyday - are we going to ban cars?

It is its people who are using the devices that determine how safe the environment is. I don't see any outcry even in China - the Mother of all PMDs.

IQ and Race
 

AhMeng

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Asset
It is not the device fault. There are many road accidents everyday - are we going to ban cars?

It is its people who are using the devices that determine how safe the environment is. I don't see any outcry even in China - the Mother of all PMDs.

IQ and Race
Sounds legit.
Conclusion : Tommy and Donald are spot on wrt Sinkies' behavioral characteristics :biggrin:
 

ChristJohnny

Alfrescian
Loyal
Tommy
He is a rich guy ... he can say whatever he wants and still lead a good life. He is not people on the street. He does not understand that people need to work and put food on the table. The struggles, anxieties, sacrifices that common folks face shaped our behavior.

So who has third class mentality?

IQ and Race
 

syed putra

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Loyal
If everybody uses PMD, taxes from cars and its usage will fall. PAP will need to find another income source to cover its budget.
 

laksaboy

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Asset
If Sinkies can reach the civility of Japs when it comes to flushing toilets and sorting out garbage, everything else will fall into place.

Thanks to decades of Japanese rule, the Taiwanese have approached that ideal.

If Taiwan were left to the godless commies from mainland China, you would see this instead:


hollandvillagemrt.jpg


prc_shit_chinatown_mrt.jpg
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
If everybody uses PMD, taxes from cars and its usage will fall. PAP will need to find another income source to cover its budget.

How about an 'air conservation tax' to 'fight climate change'? They've already taxed the water, taxing the air should be the natural progression.
 
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