Skip to main content

PSA Peugeot Citroën takes a stake in car-sharing company

French car company PSA Peugeot Citroën has become a shareholder in peer-to-peer car-sharing start-up Koolicar, with an investment of US$10.6 million (€18 million), alongside investment fund MAIF Avenir, Koolicar's partner since 2010. Now active in around 40 French cities, with over 60,000 registered users, Koolicar started car-sharing operations back in 2012 and claims it offers unique and innovative technology for peer-to-peer car rental in Europe. Based on a connected box that can be fitted on any typ
April 12, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
French car company 1900 PSA Peugeot Citroën has become a shareholder in peer-to-peer car-sharing start-up Koolicar, with an investment of US$10.6 million (€18 million), alongside investment fund MAIF Avenir, Koolicar's partner since 2010.

Now active in around 40 French cities, with over 60,000 registered users, Koolicar started car-sharing operations back in 2012 and claims it offers unique and innovative technology for peer-to-peer car rental in Europe. Based on a connected box that can be fitted on any type of vehicle, enabling keyless transactions, calculation of mileage and lease duration, and geo-location, it makes car-sharing easy. Key advantages of the Koolicar service are its high quality, ease-of-use and range of user options as well as its responsive, customer-focused teams.

With PSA Peugeot Citroën and MAIF supporting its growth, the start-up will be able to step up its strategic growth plan and obtain the means to equip up to 30,000 cars with its technology. In addition, its team will also be expanded from 30 to 100 employees in Paris and Montreal, with new positions to be created in IT, marketing and customer service.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Parifex speed cameras: picture perfect
    September 30, 2020
    From speed cameras to smart cities, image processing and AI – Parifex is not short of ambition. Nathalie Deguen tells Adam Hill where the French company is heading next
  • Investment boost for Canada’s weather warning systems
    August 5, 2013
    David Crawford reviews national and regional initiatives to boost Canada’s weather forecasting. Over the next five years Canada’s national weather services are due to benefit from a CAN$248 million injection of funding into the Environment Canada (EC) department to deliver timelier and more accurate weather warnings and forecasts for users including travellers and transport operators. The scheme, set out in the country’s 2013 Economic Action Plan, is to revitalise the services with new investments in federa
  • Cable cars come of age in trans-continental expansion
    April 30, 2015
    David Crawford explores a high-level option of public transport. Sharing its origin with that of ski lifts at winter sports resorts in the European Alps, urban aerial cable transport is attracting growing interest as a low-footprint, low-energy alternative to conventional public transport that can swoop over ground-level traffic congestion.
  • Improving the positional accuracy of GNSS road user charging
    July 23, 2012
    The European GINA project is intended to address and overcome many of the institutional, technical and public acceptance hurdles currently faced by satellite-based road user charging schemes. Dave Tindall and Denis Naberezhnykh, TRL, and Laure Dezes, ERF, write. Pay-as-you-drive Road User Charging (RUC), whereby demand (or congestion) is managed by applying appropriate tariffs in order to encourage drivers to make their journeys at less busy times, on less congested routes or even on different modes, could