Paris just voted to ban rental e-scooters. Other cities could be next

Paris – Residents here voted to ban e-scooters for hire, making the French capital the first major European city to U-turn on the two-wheelers. Many are seeing this as a litmus test for how the micromobility industry would fare in the face of government efforts around the world to restrict it.

The results of Sunday’s referendum were overwhelming: Some 89 percent voted to ban the scooters. But turnout was extremely low, at 7.46 percent, prompting e-scooter operators to say the vote was not truly representative of the wishes of the city’s residents – particularly its younger citizens, who are more likely to rent e-scooters but less likely to show up to vote.

Tourists ride a scooter in Paris, Friday, march 31, 2023.

The vote to ban “free-floating” e-scooters – named because they are dockless – came even after the main e-scooter providers offered free rides to those who were registered to vote.

Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo, who was in favor of a ban, said she would respect the outcome of the nonbinding vote. She pledged there would be “no more self-service scooters in Paris” from Sept. 1, the day after their operators’ contract with the city expires. The ban would apply only to e-scooters for hire, not to those owned by individuals.

Now the question is whether it could encourage other cities to enact similar bans. While e-scooter operators have framed Paris as a global outlier, other major cities have enacted restrictions, including Amsterdam and Shanghai.

On an overcast Sunday in Paris, voters were asked to answer a simple question: “For or against self-service scooters in Paris?”

As they streamed out of the revolving doors of City Hall, voters in Paris’s 17th district mostly said they answered in the negative. The reasons they cited – including concerns relating to safety and cleanliness – echo the criticism of e-scooters heard in cities around the world, from Cincinnati to Shanghai.

“There is a large portion of people who use these scooters who do not follow the rules, and therefore who behave in a dangerous way, who put the lives of others in danger,” said Georges Jozwiak, 72, who said he mostly gets around Paris on foot.