Chinese bike-sharing giants battle for Paris turf after ‘Vélib fiasco’
With the wheels falling off Paris’s once ‘full speed ahead’ public bike-sharing scheme China’s station-free rental operators are bidding to fill the void
Paris has been forced to back-pedal on its plan to become Europe’s most cyclist-friendly city by 2020 as its municipal bike-sharing network has ground to a halt due to technical issues.
The Vélib system – a portmanteau of French words vélo (“bicycle”) and liberté (“freedom”) – was launched in 2007 and successfully managed by the city until the end of 2017.
The grey bikes were once available for hire around the clock from 1,800 stations and became a familiar sight in the capital as young and old alike darted through the streets.
In 2014, the p’tit Vélib – “little Vélib” – was launched, aimed at children, and the banks of the Seine and the Bois des Boulognes forest thronged with toddlers riding the hop-on, drop-off bikes.
The queues at Vélib stations attested to the scheme’s popularity. Today, those queues have disappeared and many stations are deserted.