Abstract

In the last few years, there has been a strong increase in the interest in and usage of so-called “Personal e-Transporters” (PeTs), also referred to as micro-mobility devices. Empirical research on the usage of PeTs as a transport mode is virtually non-existent, especially within Europe. This paper aims to fill this gap by investigating people’s motivations and barriers to the use of PeTs. To this end, a behavioural survey was conducted in nine European cities. A representative sample of approximately 250 respondents per city was collected, resulting in a dataset, after data cleaning, of 2159 observations. Generally, respondents’ perceptions of PeTs are not (yet) very favourable. Respondents’ perceptions related to cost and safety received the lowest scores. The results from the transtheoretical model of behavioural change show that a variety of factors influence the stage of behavioural change in which the respondents can be situated. These factors include cycling norms, current walking behaviour, walking attitudes, pro-environmental orientation, gender, PeTs possession, cycling obstacles and subscription to a bicycle sharing service. An important strength of this study lies in the international nature and the size of the data collection, ensuring the reliability and transferability of the results to other cities. To the best of our knowledge, it is the first large-scale survey to investigate people’s travel behaviour related to the usage of PeTs and possibly the only large-scale investigation that took place before the deployment of shared e-scooters in many European cities. Furthermore, an explicit link is made with other modes of active transport (walking and cycling).

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe spatial analysis results show that the densest e-scooter usage happened in downtown areas and university campuses in both cities

  • The results show that proximity to the city centre, better access to transit and greater land-use diversity positively correlated with higher e-scooter ridership in both cities

  • In Germany, PeTs have only been allowed on public roads since the introduction of the Elektrokleinstfahrzeuge-verordnung in June 2019

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Summary

Introduction

The spatial analysis results show that the densest e-scooter usage happened in downtown areas and university campuses in both cities. The temporal characteristics of the two cities’ e-scooter usage patterns turned out to be different between both cities. The results show that proximity to the city centre, better access to transit and greater land-use diversity positively correlated with higher e-scooter ridership in both cities. Compared to single-family residential areas, office and institutional land use were more likely to relate to higher ridership in both cities. The differences between both cities highlight the importance of local uniqueness, according to the authors

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