Skip to main content

Charge to expand e-scooter support in Paris

Docking stations will be rolled out in 100 locations over 18 months in Paris
By Ben Spencer February 25, 2021 Read time: 1 min
Charge wants to ensure e-scooters are organised, docked and charged in Paris (image credit: Charge Enterprises)

Charge Enterprises' infrastructure division is to roll out docking and charging stations for electric scooters in more than 100 locations over 18 months in the French capital. 

Charge says its stations are powered from the existing electrical grid and require no battery swapping. 

Andrew Fox, CEO at Charge, says: “Our expansion in the city of Paris is a big step toward ensuring e-scooters are organised, docked, and charged in a metropolis that has been overrun by incorrectly parked scooters, creating safety concerns on sidewalks and leaving few charged vehicles ready for use.”

Improper use of e-scooters is an ongoing issue in Paris. Last year, the city's mayor Anne Hidalgo confirmed broken scooters were discarded on pavements, entrances to Metro stations or thrown over bridges into the River Seine.

Charge infrastructure began deploying stations in Paris in June 2020. 

Elsewhere, the firm is receiving new support from a manufacturing agreement with Poitras Industries to meet the demand for micromobility infrastructure. 

The Quebec-based company designs and manufactures durable urban fixtures such as bus shelters, benches, bike racks and window displays. 

Last month, Tier confirmed its own plans to crack down on irresponsible parking in Paris by implementing positioning technology from Fantasmo. 

 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Leonardo expands multimodal solutions
    April 7, 2021
    Leonardo's e-Nobu and Matrics-AVM control units address are integrated with 5G
  • Tritium opens mobility centres in Australia and Netherlands
    May 10, 2019
    Tritium has opened two R&D electric mobility innovation centres in Australia and the Netherlands. The Tritium e-mobility centre in Brisbane serves as an expansion of the company’s headquarters and will be used to develop disruptive technologies for electric vehicles (EVs). A portion of Electric Power Research Institute's $3.2m package, issued by the US Department of Energy, will be used to develop an extreme fast-charging system which is expected to add 475km of range to an EV in 10 minutes. Last
  • Thales completes Jakarta ABT service
    October 18, 2022
    Account-based ticketing and MaaS solutions delivered on Indonesian city's transit system
  • Drones make Soarizon watcher of the skies
    December 16, 2020
    Getting a close view of where traffic problems are occurring is one of the main selling points of the ITS vision industry. Soarizon is doing things differently, Benjamin Orcan tells Adam Hill