Skip to main content

Barcelona's bike share scheme a life saver

A recent study of the health benefits of Barcelona's Bicing communal bike share scheme, reveals it is a life-saver, responsible for saving 12 lives a year. Barcelona's community bicycle programme, Bicing, was inaugurated in March 2007. One of several schemes operated in cities around the world by Clear Channel, it has fulfilled its role of providing an efficient, ecologically friendly and critically important form of transport, helping to increase urban mobility and reduce street congestion. Clear Channel h
January 26, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
RSS

A recent study of the health benefits of Barcelona's Bicing communal bike share scheme, reveals it is a life-saver, responsible for saving 12 lives a year

Barcelona's community bicycle programme, 1723 Bicing, was inaugurated in March 2007. One of several schemes operated in cities around the world by 1730 Clear Channel, it has fulfilled its role of providing an efficient, ecologically friendly and critically important form of transport, helping to increase urban mobility and reduce street congestion.

Clear Channel has a 10 year contract to manage the scheme for the city council 1725 Barcelona de Serveis Municipals. The US$3M costs to operate Bicing each year is largely raised through on-street car parking throughout the densely populated inner city. As the bare statistics of the scheme reveal (see sidebar), Bicing is well used with an average of 40,000 trips per day.

Researchers lead by Dr David Rojas-Rueda from Barcelona's Centre for Research in Environmental Epidemiology (CREAL) have studied the health benefits of bike sharing Bicing bare statistics:
•180,000 subscribers
•6,000 bicycles
•440 bike stations
•Average of 40,000 trips per day
•Average week-day trip distance:
3.29km (4.15km on weekends); •68% of trips are performed between homes and work or school;
•37% of trips are combined with other forms of transport
schemes including Bicing under the TAPAS (Transportation Air pollution & Physical Activities) project. The results showed Bicing saves 12 lives every year. In addition, there is another major public health benefit - the scheme is directly responsible for reducing CO2 emissions by an estimated 9,000 tons per year.

Using a health impact model to integrate existing data from scientific studies and local travel information, the researchers estimated the number of deaths associated with travelling by bicycle compared with driving for three main areas: physical activity, road traffic incidents and exposure to air pollution. They also estimated the reduction in carbon dioxide emissions.

They calculated an annual increase of 0.13 deaths from air pollution and 0.03 deaths from traffic accidents among cyclists compared with car users. As a result of physical activity, 12.46 deaths were avoided, making a total of 12.28 deaths avoided among cyclists every year.

"Our work has shown that low cost public bicycle sharing systems aimed at encouraging commuters to cycle are worth implementing in other cities, not only for the health benefits but also for potential cobenefits such as reduction in air pollution and greenhouse gasses," Dr Rojas-Rueda concluded.

Although further work is needed, this initial assessment is important "to encourage cities to change car use by stimulating implementation of bike sharing systems in cities for the health of the population."










A smart system
Clear Channel, which launched the world's first ever community bike sharing scheme in Renne, France, in 1997, believes such networks are a great example of how technology can transform something as basic as a bike into a new and smart transport service that improves the life of city dwellers. The company's Smartbikes are equipped with an RFID chip that allows their position to be tracked and all bike stations are connected online via GPRS with a central server through which the company manages the whole service. A mobile application helps customers to check for their closest station, bike availability and to unlock a bike for use, as well as registering for the service.

RSS

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • The Asia-Pacific poses a multitude of ITS challenges
    May 30, 2014
    The Asia-Pacific ITS Forum and Exhibition in Auckland, New Zealand, provided a focus for the region’s ITS Associations. Mary Bell reports. In late April, ITS New Zealand hosted the 13th Asia-Pacific ITS Forum and Exhibition in Auckland. Around 350 delegates from 24 nations gathered to share and advance ITS applications on both strategic and technical levels and to discuss the differing and various challenges faced in the region.
  • Felix Scheuter, of Haenni Instruments, on effective highway weight enforcement
    September 26, 2013
    Felix Scheuter, managing director at Haenni Instruments, the renowned Switzerland-based mobile scales manufacturer, gives World Highways his views on how best to ensure effective highway weight enforcement The main danger for any road is its gradual destruction by overloaded heavy goods vehicles (HGVs). The more frequently such vehicles use a highway, the faster it is destroyed. Mobile patrol teams using mobile weighing scales are a highly effective way to enforce weight limits aimed at protecting ro
  • Growth of outsourcing simplifies transportation operations
    June 11, 2012
    Xerox Chairman and CEO Ursula Burns will deliver the keynote address at the opening plenary of ITS America’s 2012 Annual Meeting in May. She talked to ITS International about the acquisition of ACS, its rebranding and the importance of the transportation sector to Xerox
  • Germany’s road traffic deaths fall to 60-year low
    April 18, 2012
    According to Germany's Federal Statistics Office, Destatis, the number of people who died in road traffic accidents in Germany decreased by 12 per cent to a 60-year low of 3,648 in 2010 compared to 2009. Paradoxically, the number of accidents registered by the police rose by 4.3 per cent to an 11-year high of around 2.4 millon. The increase in the number of accidents has been put down to the exceptional weather conditions, in particular in the winter season.