London firms turn to cargo bikes

An employee of the company Zhero prepares to make a delivery using a cargo bike, in this photo taken in London on Oct. 27.

GREEN LOGISTICS An employee of the company Zhero prepares to make a delivery using a cargo bike, in this photo taken in London on Oct. 27.—AFP

LONDON — On a busy north London street, plumber Ben Hume-Wright zipped through the heavy rush-hour traffic to his next job by bike.

Trades such as his used to rely on vans, but many are now choosing to do more business using two or sometimes three wheels.

Since switching his Ford diesel pickup truck for an electric cargo bike two years ago, Hume-Wright said he has been busier than ever.

“I used to take on a maximum of five or six appointments” a day, he told Agence France-Presse (AFP) as the traffic ground forward behind him.

“I’ll now book in six, seven, and possibly even eight, because I know that I’m not going to get stuck in traffic.”

Hume-Wright was set up in 2010 and relied on his van for 11 years. But now describes it as a “glorified shed” handy for storing parts and tools.

When faced with a big installation job, he gets a supplier to deliver bulkier items directly to the client’s address.

Growth strategy

He then shows up on his bike with just the tools needed for the job.

“It’s cheaper, I don’t have any of the fuel costs and I just enjoy it. It’s a lot more fun,” he said.

Transport for London (TfL), the local government body responsible for most of the British capital’s transport network, launched its first “Cargo Bike Action Plan” earlier this year.

It wants to “promote and enable” its growth, given a rise in polluting van deliveries from online shopping since the pandemic.

The use of cargo bikes, which can cost several thousand pounds (dollars), also increased during lockdown, and encouraging their use chimes with Mayor Sadiq Khan’s aim of a carbon net-zero city by 2030.

TfL estimates that the move toward cargo bikes could save up to 30,000 tonnes of CO2 emissions a year across Greater London by that time.

Cargo bikes were popular across northern Europe until the mid-20th century but fell out of favor as motorized vehicles gained ground.

Their revival began in the early 2000s in cycling-crazy Denmark and the Netherlands, which unlike London are blessed with flat terrain and good cycling infrastructure.

The number of cargo bikes on the streets of Copenhagen increased from 20,000 in 2020 to more than 40,000 in 2022, the city said.

‘Astronomical’

In Germany—Europe’s largest market for E-cargo bikes—165,000 units were sold in 2022.

Ben Jaconelli, chief executive of leading E-bike and E-cargo bike firm Fully Charged, said UK growth has been “astronomical.”

He cofounded the firm in 2014, when the sight of an electric cargo bike was a rarity. “Nowadays, it’s almost rare not to see,” he added.

Van fleet

The Bicycle Association, a UK trade body, reported a 30-percent increase in UK sales of E-cargo bikes in the year to May 2023.

Contributory factors include the controversial expansion of London’s ultra-low emission zone, which charges the drivers of the most polluting vehicles.

Logistics company Zhero is also committed to using the bikes. It transports fine art between studios, galleries, and related businesses such as framers.

Like Hume-Wright, environmental considerations were a key factor for the switch. But cofounder Joe Sharpe called it a “straight-up financial decision.”

“It’s cheaper to move things by cargo bikes than it is by van,” he said near Sadie Coles HQ gallery, a regular client in the busy Soho district.

“They’re the most logical vehicle for moving things around the city… Sometimes we might be doing 30 to 40 deliveries a day on a cargo bike. In a van, eight to 10.”

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