Anywheel gets LTA approval to expand local shared bicycle fleet
23 Jul 2020|378 views
The shared bike population in Singapore will be expanding after local bicycle-sharing firm Anywheel received approval from the Land Transport Authority (LTA) to expand its fleet from 10,000 to 15,000 with effect from July 2020.
The LTA also announced on 22 July 2020 that its latest bike-sharing licence application cycle has opened.


New firms can apply for a sandbox licences to start bike-sharing operations on a small scale. This allows them to operate up to 1,000 bicycles in Singapore while the LTA assesses their operations, before they can apply to increase their fleet sizes.
Besides Anywheel's maximum approved fleet size of 15,000, local start-up SG bike is the largest operator, with a licence to operate 25,000 bikes. In November last year, SG Bike completed its takeover of Chinese firm Mobike's licence to operate 25,000 bicycles in Singapore.


However, misuse of shared bikes surfaced, with some reportedly chained outside flats, and others abandoned in canals and bins or vandalised.
More significantly, operators struggled to meet the LTA's new licensing regulations that were aimed at tackling indiscriminate parking and controlling fleet sizes. oBike, GBikes and Share Bike SG shut down their operations in 2018, while ofo's licence was cancelled by LTA last year.
The shared bike population in Singapore will be expanding after local bicycle-sharing firm Anywheel received approval from the Land Transport Authority (LTA) to expand its fleet from 10,000 to 15,000 with effect from July 2020.
The LTA also announced on 22 July 2020 that its latest bike-sharing licence application cycle has opened.


New firms can apply for a sandbox licences to start bike-sharing operations on a small scale. This allows them to operate up to 1,000 bicycles in Singapore while the LTA assesses their operations, before they can apply to increase their fleet sizes.
Besides Anywheel's maximum approved fleet size of 15,000, local start-up SG bike is the largest operator, with a licence to operate 25,000 bikes. In November last year, SG Bike completed its takeover of Chinese firm Mobike's licence to operate 25,000 bicycles in Singapore.


However, misuse of shared bikes surfaced, with some reportedly chained outside flats, and others abandoned in canals and bins or vandalised.
More significantly, operators struggled to meet the LTA's new licensing regulations that were aimed at tackling indiscriminate parking and controlling fleet sizes. oBike, GBikes and Share Bike SG shut down their operations in 2018, while ofo's licence was cancelled by LTA last year.
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