Skip to main content

Bolt signs e-hailing deal with Dubai Taxi Company

Move aimed at creating largest e-hail platform in United Arab Emirates
By Adam Hill November 5, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
DTC operates more than 8,900 vehicles (image: Dubai Taxi Company)

Dubai Taxi Company (DTC) and shared mobility provider Bolt are aiming to create the largest e-hailing platform in the United Arab Emirates, thus reducing reliance on private cars, they say.

The firms' strategic partnership will see them launch in Dubai - the first time Bolt, which operates in over 600 cities across 50 countries, has entered UAE. As well as ride-hail, it offers scooter and e-bike rental, and short-term car rental.

Bolt has a footprint in the region, launching in Saudi Arabia in 2017 and in Egypt earlier this year.

Mansoor Rahma Alfalasi, CEO of DTC, says: "This landmark strategic partnership brings together DTC’s position as the UAE’s largest fleet owner with over 6,000 taxis and limousines and Bolt’s position as a leading global shared mobility platform."

Alfalasi says the agreement reflects DTC's commitment to supporting Dubai Roads & Transport Authority directives "to transition 80% of taxi trips to e-booking in the coming years".

Markus Villig, founder and CEO of Bolt, said: “There are over 3.5 million cars registered and operating on the UAE’s roads which can cause increased travel time, congestion, accidents and pollution."

The partnership will reduce the need to use a private car, he says, which "will have a positive impact on the Emirate and the people living here".

The deal allows DTC to utilise infrastructure and technology created by Bolt, incorporating the most recent digital vehicle booking technologies into DTC’s ecosystem. The Dubai-based firm also expects to benefit from Bolt's global footprint.

Established in 1994, DTC says it operates more than 8,900 vehicles, including buses and last-mile delivery bike services.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • AV ride-pooling in Hamburg by 2025
    September 17, 2021
    VW, Moia and Argo AI's plan is important piece of future mobility 'puzzle', says German city
  • An instant system from Instant System
    September 15, 2021
    Instant System, a France-headquartered company that provides white label Mobility as a Service (MaaS) will be in Hamburg to present its mobile application
  • ChargeWheel sparks mobile EV charging in San Francisco
    April 8, 2019
    ChargeWheel has secured $1 million in funding to launch a mobile electric vehicle (EV) charging network in the San Francisco Bay Area. The network will be based on ChargeWheel’s mobile Energy Trailers, which don’t require a connection to the grid, and can therefore operate in any car park. The company says they offer a combined solar-powered generation and energy storage solution, and plans to deploy 100 in the Bay Area by the end of 2019. The units can simultaneously charge four EVs or up to 400 electric
  • After two decades of research, ITS is getting into its stride
    June 4, 2015
    Colin Sowman gets the global view on how ITS has shaped the way we travel today and what will shape the way we travel tomorrow. Over the past two decades the scope and spread of intelligent transport systems has grown and diversified to encompass all modes of travel while at the same time integrating and consolidating. Two decades ago the idea of detecting cyclists or pedestrians may have been considered impossible and why would you want to do that anyway? Today cyclists can account for a significant propor