Skip to main content

Beam lights up first Sydney suburban e-scooter trial

Geofencing controls where scooters are ridden and how fast they can travel in Kogarah
By David Arminas January 25, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
The shared e-scooters will be limited to 20km/h on roads within the trial area (© Adwo | Dreamstime.com)

Beam has started trialling its e-scooters in Kogarah, the first such pilot in Australia's greater Sydney area.

Kogarah, with a population of around 16,500, is located 14km south-west of the Sydney central business district and is part of the Georges River recreational area in New South Wales.

Residents and visitors 16 and over can hire one of 60 purple Beam Saturn 5 e-scooters as well as helmets. Beam says that its Saturn 5 has wireless phone charging and auditory alerts, as well as improved geofencing capabilities to ensure safe operation of micromobility alongside other modes of transport.

Geofencing technology controls where e-scooters are ridden and how fast they can travel, as well as ensuring they are parked appropriately.

The shared e-scooters will be limited to 20km/h on roads within the trial area which have a speed limit of 50km/h or less. E-scooters are not permitted on footpaths.

Currently, only e-scooters provided through a shared scheme are permitted for use in approved trial areas and privately owned e-scooters cannot be used in public areas in the state. 

For managing the trial, the local council has established a shared e-scooter Local Working Group with authorities, including Transport for New South Wales, NSW Health, plus local bus services, police and council representatives.

“It was encouraging to see the level of interest from residents and visitors at the two free Beam Safe Academy e-scooter sessions at Kogarah Town Square recently,” said said Sam Elmir Georges, mayor of the River Council. “We are eager to see results of usage and riders’ feedback captured from Beam, also feedback from residents and visitors through the council’s consultation [process] which is now open.”

The trial is also the sixth underway as part of the state’s shared e-scooter scheme. According to Transport for NSW, people can be fined for riding an e-scooter outside the trial area and for not wearing a helmet.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • RedSpeed offers schools automated no-cost stop arm enforcement
    March 28, 2014
    School authorities in the US are turning to automated school bus stop arm enforcement to curb an astonishing number of violations. It is estimated that every year nearly 17,000 American children are sent to emergency rooms as a result of school bus related crashes. And when surveyed, 99% of school bus drivers reported that the most dangerous behaviour they encounter is drivers passing a school bus with its stop sign arm extended. Every day these drivers who violate the extended stop arm signs put at risk
  • EU transport committee votes for cross-border enforcement of traffic offences
    May 18, 2012
    Motorists who speed, ignore red lights or drink and drive when in a European country other than their own will be brought to book more easily, thanks to closer cooperation between European police forces and EU-wide enforcement of traffic rules, under plans approved yesterday by the European Parliament's transport committee. However, the UK and Ireland decided not to opt in to the system, while Denmark is entitled to opt out because the Council changed the legal basis of the directive from "transport" to "po
  • New Zealand speed limits will be increased if National wins next election
    September 28, 2023
    'Blanket approach' to speed reduction under Labour government will end, opposition says
  • Smoothing the path to reducing traffic pollution
    October 22, 2014
    David Crawford reviews a new approach to traffic smoothing. A key objective for the Californian city of Bakersfield’s upgraded traffic operations centre (TOC), which opened in June 2014, is to help improve living conditions in a region with one of the worst air quality problems in the US. The TOC is speeding up the smoothing of traffic flows by delivering faster and better-informed traffic signal retiming and synchronisation.