Local Transport Today is the authoritative, independent journal for transport decision makers. Analysis, Comment & News on Transport Policy, Planning, Finance and Delivery since 1989.

How innovation is boosting industry and the economy

Innovation – in policy, design, products and services – is a key part of delivering an industrial strategy, boosting economies and shaping new mobility futures. The Cycling + Walking Innovations event will highlight new approaches from the walking and cycling sectors. Kevin Mayne, Chief Executive Designate, Cycling Industries Europe, talks to LTT about cycle industry innovation

09 November 2018
The 2017 DfT Innovation Challenge Fund worked in tandem with the supermarket chain Sainsbury’s to trial the use of electric cargo bikes to deliver groceries, with great success. Now the DfT is looking to support future first / last mile deliveries via cycle, e-bike and cargo bikes.
The 2017 DfT Innovation Challenge Fund worked in tandem with the supermarket chain Sainsbury’s to trial the use of electric cargo bikes to deliver groceries, with great success. Now the DfT is looking to support future first / last mile deliveries via cycle, e-bike and cargo bikes.
Innovation in action: GM blended electrification, engineering know-how, design talents and automotive-grade testing with great minds from the bike industry to create its eBikes, it says. Now the cycle industry wants the same levels of support as the auto industry enjoys
Innovation in action: GM blended electrification, engineering know-how, design talents and automotive-grade testing with great minds from the bike industry to create its eBikes, it says. Now the cycle industry wants the same levels of support as the auto industry enjoys

 

In a week that General Motors reveals two innovative, integrated and connected eBikes, it’s clear that the cycling industry is set to become a much bigger global player in the shared mobility markets, and is finally demanding a level playing field in terms of government and EU support for industry innovation and R+D. The new Brussels-based Cycling Industries Europe (CIE) is ‘redefining the cycle industry’ in its new business model. It has been created to enable European cycling businesses of all sizes and from all sectors to make their contribution to business and society. Kevin Mayne, who will become CIE Chief Executive in 2019, has big plans for the new organisation: ‘What’s completely new is that we can act as an industrial body, supporting thriving SMEs, research and development and innovation. The bike industry is very innovative, coming up with e-bikes and shared bike technologies, but it’s all self-funded. In comparison, industries such as the auto industry expect to get substantial subsidies from government and from the European Union. We provide shared mobility to every country in Europe. The European cycle industry has not been ready to stand up and shout that it can be central to future mobility platforms and patterns,’ he says, and aims to change that. ‘We are no longer the people who just make bikes. We’re interested in new technologies, services and data platforms.’

The CIE will, says Mayne, include bicycle and parts makers, bike share operators, financial services, insurance, health, bicycle logistics, construction, tourism, technology and digital services, and will capture all the lobbying power of cycling companies in a united voice. 

‘We have released over 1.5 billion euro in EU funds for cycling investments, mainly in infrastructure which will grow the market further. We represent 650,000 jobs in Europe today, that’s bigger than coal, steel or mining,’ says Mayne. ‘Our tourism economy is 44 billion euros – bigger than the cruise ship industry. Imagine how much power we could bring to cycling if we unite all the private sector and commercial voices in cycling behind one vision and in one structure?’

We provide shared mobility to every country in Europe. The European cycle industry has not been ready to stand up and shout that it can be central to future mobility platforms and patterns

Imagine also, he adds, the sums that have gone into the various Catapults and into autonomous and connected vehicle research. ‘Think of the monies that are going into electric charging infrastructure and compare this to the peanuts given to the bicycle industry,’ he laments. ‘Yet cycling, and especially bike share and e-bikes, are central to the success of future mobility in cities and towns. A company recently told me that including bike share on their MaaS platform added 100,000 trips in three months, he says. ‘Uber and other ride-sharing services have announced that they are adding bike share to their mixes. Part of what the CIE is about is taking existing and future members into this mobility space and to educate the industry about the potential of cycling and cycling innovation.’

One key recent EU research study into future funding needs identified likely future scenarios with disruptive implications and associated priority directions for EU research and innovation; programmes that the UK is expected to continue to buy into, post Brexit, in the same way as the US, Switzerland and Norway do. ‘Horizon Europe is the largest open research funding platform in the world, and not to be part of it would be a brutal blow to UK research,’ says Mayne.  

‘We need to be part of this wider multimodal mobility debate and this research programme,’ stresses Mayne. ‘In the MaaS context things are changing fast: two or three years ago everybody was waiting for the private sector to move forward on innovation and getting things going, but now many public authorities are questioning commercially-driven models and insisting that MaaS includes policy choices like promoting cycling and walking.’  

Working with partners such as the European Cycle Logistics Foundation and ECF, CIE is already delivering EU-funded schemes such as the €4-million funded “City Changer Cargo Bike” which will increase the use of cycle logistics in 100 European cities. CIE members think this sort of funding will grow through partnerships and the forming of new consortia. ‘We’re also going to act as a kind of “clearing house” that can point people towards a single point of negotiation on behalf of the cycling business sector around bike-share, MaaS and future mobility options,’ says Mayne. At the city level, there’s a need to talk to an industry body that can consolidate the contacts and can have the big picture on who’s doing what, where and when, across the wider cycle industry at European Union level, he adds. ‘That will cascade nationally too. I hope our work will also help to define and structure the wide range of business actors in the world of cycling at all levels, and bring them together with a much clearer, stronger voice.’

Kevin Mayne will be speaking at the Cycling + Walking Innovations event on Dec 5 in London. Plus, Carey Newson from Transport for Quality of Life will outline the contribution of the bicycle industry to Britain’s industrial strategy.

Rail & Roads Director
Transport for the North
Manchester
Circa £126k to £147k pa – pay award pending
Rail & Roads Director
Transport for the North
Manchester
Circa £126k to £147k pa – pay award pending
Team Leader Transport
Slough Borough Council
Slough – Observatory House
£44,428 to £49,498 plus £7,000 market supplement; Local Weighting Allowance of £1039 per annum
View all Vacancies
 
Search
 
 
 

TransportXtra is part of Landor LINKS

© 2024 TransportXtra | Landor LINKS Ltd | All Rights Reserved

Subscriptions, Magazines & Online Access Enquires
[Frequently Asked Questions]
Email: subs.ltt@landor.co.uk | Tel: +44 (0) 20 7091 7959

Shop & Accounts Enquires
Email: accounts@landor.co.uk | Tel: +44 (0) 20 7091 7855

Advertising Sales & Recruitment Enquires
Email: daniel@landor.co.uk | Tel: +44 (0) 20 7091 7861

Events & Conference Enquires
Email: conferences@landor.co.uk | Tel: +44 (0) 20 7091 7865

Press Releases & Editorial Enquires
Email: info@transportxtra.com | Tel: +44 (0) 20 7091 7875

Privacy Policy | Terms and Conditions | Advertise

Web design london by Brainiac Media 2020