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Episode 4: Micromobility: Shared or Owned?

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内容由Ride: The Urban Mobility Podcast提供。所有播客内容(包括剧集、图形和播客描述)均由 Ride: The Urban Mobility Podcast 或其播客平台合作伙伴直接上传和提供。如果您认为有人在未经您许可的情况下使用您的受版权保护的作品,您可以按照此处概述的流程进行操作https://zh.player.fm/legal

GUESTS: Richard Corbett of Voi Technology, Adam Norris of Pure Electric, and Kersten Heineke of the McKinsey Center for Future Mobility

The term "micromobility" was first coined by Horace Dediu of Micromobility Industries, and refers to minimalist personal mobility, using vehicles weighing no more than 500kg.

Micromobility is now widely accepted as part of our vocabulary, but ask for a definition, and you’ll get a wide range of responses. You can be sure, however, that the definition will include e-scooters.

And that’s thanks to the e-scooter boom that’s taken place over the last few years, with a growing number of towns and cities around the world offering e-scooters since they first appeared on the streets of LA and San Francisco in about 2018.

Motorized scooters are nothing new, of course - they’ve been around for over a century - but it was a start-up in Singapore that brought free-floating rentable electric scooters to life in 2016, and a revolution was born.

It’s safe to say that e-scooters are here to stay – but what does that mean for the cities with no e-scooter strategy in place that find themselves suddenly hosting e-scooter providers?

And even if a city does have a micromobility strategy, how does it integrate micromobility start-ups into its long-established public transport services?

Then there’s the detail: pay-as-you-go or subscription, docked or free-floating? Not to mention regulation, safety, and monitoring… And that’s before we’ve even had time to think about profitability. For city regulators, each of these needs careful thought, planning, and time – in stark contrast to the fast-moving world in which many of the micromobility start-ups like to operate.

We’re delighted to welcome to the RIDE podcast three experts on micromobility:

  • Richard Corbett of Voi Technologies
  • Adam Norris of Pure Electric
  • Kersten Heineke of the McKinsey Center for Future Mobility

You can subscribe to Ride: The Urban Mobility Podcast wherever you get your podcasts. Feel free to share it, like it, give it a rating, sign up to the Ride LinkedIn page, and check out our website, ridemobilitypodcast.com.

  continue reading

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Manage episode 316795255 series 3300408
内容由Ride: The Urban Mobility Podcast提供。所有播客内容(包括剧集、图形和播客描述)均由 Ride: The Urban Mobility Podcast 或其播客平台合作伙伴直接上传和提供。如果您认为有人在未经您许可的情况下使用您的受版权保护的作品,您可以按照此处概述的流程进行操作https://zh.player.fm/legal

GUESTS: Richard Corbett of Voi Technology, Adam Norris of Pure Electric, and Kersten Heineke of the McKinsey Center for Future Mobility

The term "micromobility" was first coined by Horace Dediu of Micromobility Industries, and refers to minimalist personal mobility, using vehicles weighing no more than 500kg.

Micromobility is now widely accepted as part of our vocabulary, but ask for a definition, and you’ll get a wide range of responses. You can be sure, however, that the definition will include e-scooters.

And that’s thanks to the e-scooter boom that’s taken place over the last few years, with a growing number of towns and cities around the world offering e-scooters since they first appeared on the streets of LA and San Francisco in about 2018.

Motorized scooters are nothing new, of course - they’ve been around for over a century - but it was a start-up in Singapore that brought free-floating rentable electric scooters to life in 2016, and a revolution was born.

It’s safe to say that e-scooters are here to stay – but what does that mean for the cities with no e-scooter strategy in place that find themselves suddenly hosting e-scooter providers?

And even if a city does have a micromobility strategy, how does it integrate micromobility start-ups into its long-established public transport services?

Then there’s the detail: pay-as-you-go or subscription, docked or free-floating? Not to mention regulation, safety, and monitoring… And that’s before we’ve even had time to think about profitability. For city regulators, each of these needs careful thought, planning, and time – in stark contrast to the fast-moving world in which many of the micromobility start-ups like to operate.

We’re delighted to welcome to the RIDE podcast three experts on micromobility:

  • Richard Corbett of Voi Technologies
  • Adam Norris of Pure Electric
  • Kersten Heineke of the McKinsey Center for Future Mobility

You can subscribe to Ride: The Urban Mobility Podcast wherever you get your podcasts. Feel free to share it, like it, give it a rating, sign up to the Ride LinkedIn page, and check out our website, ridemobilitypodcast.com.

  continue reading

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