Skip to main content

Up to 60,000 city bikes will be available in Poland by 2025, says Nextbike Polska

Nextbike Polska, a developer of bike sharing systems, will focus on the Polish market, which it anticipates will have up to 60,000 city bikes by 2025. The company says this growth will stem from an increase in the current 26,000 bikes in use today as well as the deployment of new models. A report by The First News says Nextbike plans to streamline its organisation and will focus on expanding in Finland, where it has already deployed 300 bikes. By the end of the year, Nextbike estimates it will s
October 24, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
Nextbike Polska, a developer of bike sharing systems, will focus on the Polish market, which it anticipates will have up to 60,000 city bikes by 2025.


The company says this growth will stem from an increase in the current 26,000 bikes in use today as well as the deployment of new models.

A report by %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 link-external The First News false https://www.thefirstnews.com/article/close-to-60000-city-bikes-in-poland-by-2025---bike-sharing-company-2566 false false%> says Nextbike plans to streamline its organisation and will focus on expanding in Finland, where it has already deployed 300 bikes.

By the end of the year, Nextbike estimates it will service a total of 17,800 bikes in Poland through the deployment of 1,200 models in northern cities Gdańsk, Gdynia and Sopot. This prediction is also based on the delivery of 1,000 bikes in the Łódź Metropolitan Railway area in central Poland as well as other contracts in cities such as Zielona Góra (western Poland), Płock (central Poland) and Chorzów (southern Poland).

Related Content

  • Transdev enters partnership to develop shared mobility solution
    January 21, 2019
    Transdev is to launch an electric and automated shuttle service by 2020 in France and Germany. The company is to integrate its autonomous shuttle transport and supervision system with a shuttle provided by the e.Go Moove joint venture – a partnership comprising e.Go, a manufacturer of electric vehicles, and chassis technology firm ZF. ZF will provide the shuttle’s electric drive systems, steering systems and brakes as well as its ProAI central computer – a system which acts as a central control unit with
  • FASTR consortium releases Automotive Industry Guidelines for Secure Over-the-Air Updates
    November 9, 2017
    A non-profit research consortium dedicated to automotive cyber security, Future of Automotive Security Technology Research (FASTR), has announced the availability of the Automotive Industry Guidelines for Secure Over-the-Air Updates. These guidelines are intended to assist automotive manufacturers and others involved in evaluating platforms for secure updates, describing the threat models, providing recommended cryptographic algorithms and detailing a step-by-step checklist for evaluating state of the art
  • Fostering ITS Policy and the IRF manifesto
    November 26, 2012
    Fostering ITS Policy, an international workshop jointly organised by TTS Italia (National Association for Telematics for Transport and Safety) and the IRF Policy Committee on ITS, aims to bring together key partners from the public, private and academic sectors in Italy to discuss ITS policy frameworks and developments in ITS university education. The workshop takes place as part of the New World Conference The New World II, the ITS for mobility management convention in Bologna on 5 December 2012 at Savoia
  • Heliox delivers charging infrastructure for e-buses in Czech Republic
    November 13, 2018
    Heliox has delivered a fast-charging network for electric buses operating in Ostrava, Czech Republic, in a bid to reduce emissions. The deployment supports the country’s stated ambition to gradually phasing out diesel-powered buses. Heliox’s OC 450 kW chargers are expected to provide Ekova Electric’s e-buses with ‘opportunity charging’, which allows batteries to be charged several times during the work cycle (usually eight hours). The company says the system utilises a pantograph to begin chargin