Wave scooters launch against Lime in Auckland
After five months enjoying Auckland streets to itself, Lime e-scooters now have a rival. Wave officially joined the city's e-scooter trial today with a powhiri at Te Puea Memorial Marae in Māngere. Wave scooters will be on Auckland streets from Wednesday morning - with 285 initially.
It will cost $1 upfront, then 30 cents a minute, to ride a Wave, founder and managing director Albert Hoeft told. That matches Lime's pricing.
Meanwhile, bike-sharing operator Onzo has just added a 20c/minute scooter button to its app, hinting that its long-promised e-scooter launch could be close. Auckland Transport Chief Executive Shane Ellison says Wave will be trialling speed limited areas. "Wave will be restricting its scooters to 15km/h on Queen Street, and in the Wynyard Quarter and Viaduct Basin areas. "This is a good opportunity for us to test slower speeds in areas with lots of people walking," he says. Wave's 15km speed limit is voluntary, it's founder said. Its scooters have a top speed of 25km/h (Lime is 27km/h on the flat). The speed limit will be enforced with GPS technology that will cap its scooters' speed in the restricted areas. Wave recently secured a permit with Auckland Council to operate 1000 scooters (the same number as Lime) in Auckland city central and outer suburbs, and initially put 500 scooters on the city's streets. Although tiny, Wave has jump-started its operation by licensing a scooter design, technology and app from US e-scooter giant Bird, which is valued around the US$2 billion mark, putting it neck-and-neck with Lime. There were two managers from Bird on-hand for today's launch, which represents its first foray into licensiing. There are now three trial e-scooter operators licensed for Auckland: the San Francisco-based multinational Lime, which enjoys hundreds of millions in backing from key investors Uber and Google; the Brisbane-based Wave - which bills itself as Australia's first scooter-sharing startup and lists 10 employees on its LinkedIn page - and local contender Onzo, which is yet to say if or when it will put scooters on streets to complement its bikes. Hoeft had no immediate comment on any plans to expand beyond Auckland.
The Auckland trial was initially due to wrap up on January 10 but was extended until March 31. At the end of the trial, the council and Auckland Transport will discuss whether any operator should be granted a permanent mobile trading license - and if so with what conditions.
Conditions such as a speed limit in some or all areas, compulsory helmets or moving e-scooters from footpaths (where they're currently legal) to cycleways (where they're currently not) will require law changes at the national level. Twyford has indicated he's open to tweaks.
On March 8, ACC said it had received 1486 electric scooter claims, costing it $739,184. Councillor Chris Darby, who heads Auckland Council's planning committee, has raised the idea of a per-ride levy for e-scooters, which could run to 5 cents. In an exclusive interview, Lime co-founder and chief executive Toby Sun said he was open to the e-scooter tax - as long as it was earmarked for new and upgraded cycleways. He was also open to some of the levy going to ACC. Lime e-scooters were recently pulled from Auckland and Zurich streets, and to a wave of bad publicity in the US, after being hit by a braking issue that caused 31 injuries locally. After a week's absence, Limes returned to Auckland on March 1, with a new requirement to report safety issues within 48 hours. Ellison said that similar problems have not been reported with Wave scooters. "Wave has also assured us that its model of scooter, which is used in other countries, has had no reports of brakes locking, or any other known issues," Ellison said. "It has also provided assurance that it will recall its fleet immediately if any malfunctions occur, until these issues are addressed."
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The Australian Prime Minister has expressed plans to ban social media use for children.
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