The prevalence of bicycles in a community is an indicator of our
ability to provide affordable transportation, lower traffic congestion,
reduce air pollution, increase mobility, and provide exercise to the world’s growing population. Bike-sharing programs are one way to get cycles to the masses. In early 2014, some 600 cities in 52 countries host advanced
bike-sharing programs, with a combined fleet of more than 570,000
bicycles.Spain leads the world with 132 separate bike-share programs. Italy has 104, and Germany, 43. The world’s largest bike-sharing program is in Wuhan, China’s sixth largest city, with 9 million people and 90,000 shared bikes.In 2013, China was home to 82 bike-sharing programs, with a whopping combined fleet of some 380,000 bicycles.The United States hosts 36 modern bike-sharing programs.
With a number of new programs in the works and planned expansions of
existing programs, the U.S. fleet is set to nearly double to over 37,000
publicly shared bicycles by the end of 2014. Read more on the website of the Earth Policy Institute here.
Portland’s Alameda Bike Bus Turns One!
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On Earth Day 2022, Physical Education teacher Sam Balto - inspired by
Barcelona's Bici Bus - decided to attempt to start his own at his school in
Alameda n...
1 year ago
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