The London shared e-scooter trial passed a milestone last month with over 500,000 rides recorded, split across the three operators involved. The milestone was passed almost exactly six months after the launch in early June. London joins Nottingham, Milton Keynes, Liverpool, Bristol and Birmingham in hitting this target (the capital’s programme launched much later than the others here).
The latest data available shows 520,000 journeys taking place on shared e-scooters within the 10 London boroughs taking part, between 7 June and 19 December. A maximum fleet size of 3,585 e-scooters is currently permitted (around 1,200 each), with the operators generally stocking at or near their limits. This has risen from just 600 in total available in the first month.
The most recent four-week reporting period saw both a reduction in the number of journeys from the previous one (2,700 per day compared with 3,400 per day) along with a rise in serious injuries reported, from none to one per week, both statistics perhaps indicative of less pleasant winter riding conditions. Taking the full trial length so far, there have been 13 serious injuries reported, approximately one per 40,000 rides.
Since the addition of Camden borough to the trial area in late September, average journey times and distances have remained broadly constant, at 2.5km (1.5 miles) and 18 minutes, suggesting an average speed (including stops at lights) of just five miles per hour. The vehicles have their top speed capped at around 12mph.