Skip to main content

Safety isues over UK e-scooter road use

Minerals and construction association MPA is warning against legalising e-scooters.
By David Arminas July 23, 2020 Read time: 3 mins
Hop to it in Lisbon: UK looking at similar e-scooter rental as the Frog scheme (photo ITS International)

Legalising e-scooters for UK highways could threaten road safety, according to the Mineral Products Association, whose members employ or use drivers of large vehicles.

The Mineral Products Association (MPA) has responded to the government’s Future of Mobility public consultation with a strong call for e-scooters to be banned from shared roads.

The association cited serious safety concerns that make riders of micro-mobility devices such as e-scooters much more vulnerable than bicycle riders. The Mineral Products Association is the trade association for the aggregates, asphalt, cement, concrete, dimension stone, lime, mortar and silica sand industries.

“Compared to bicycles, e-scooters are less visible, less stable and less able to cope with potholes and other road hazards,” said Robert McIlveen, director of public affairs at the MPA. “MPA and our members have worked hard over the years promoting shared road safety and we believe that introducing new, more dangerous types of vehicle is neither safe nor sensible.”

He said MPA is a champion of the Construction Logistics and Community Safety standard, supporting high standards among our membership who are actively engaged in ensuring we minimise risk to cyclists, pedestrians and all other road users.”

The government’s Department for Transport is looking to roll out e-scooter rental schemes and so is working on clarifying their use. Riders reportedly would need a driver’s licence at some level to use one on the road.

At the moment in the UK, an e-scooter can be used only on private land and not on public roads, despite being legally classified as a “personal light electric vehicles” or PLEV.

On the one hand, an e-scooter is classified as a motor vehicle and so subject to legal requirement such as road use tax and licensing.

On the other hand, because many don't always have visible rear red lights, number or licence plates or signalling ability, they can't be used on highways.

However, un-powered scooters - those without motors and which are usually pushed along by using a foot – can be used on roads. But they can’t be used on pavements, footpaths or cycle paths.

The issue over the legality of e-scooter use on roads has not stopped many people, especially in big cities such as London, from buying them – which is not illegal – and then using them on roads – which is illegal. Last July, nearly 100 electric scooter users were stopped in London during one week, according to media reports at the time. Police fined 10 people and confiscated riders’ scooters because of highway infractions including speeding and going through red lights.

The police crackdown came shortly after  a woman died and a boy was seriously injured while riding their scooters.

 

Related Content

  • The risk of drugged driving on Europe’s roads
    May 1, 2018
    Drivers under the influence of drugs present a major hazard to road safety, according to a new report by the pan-European police agency TISPOL The risk from driving under the influence of psycho-active drugs results in road fatalities and injuries from crashes right across Europe, according to the report. The problem relates to both legal prescription medication as well as illegal drugs, notes TISPOL – European Traffic Police Network – which was established by the traffic police forces of Europe to impro
  • Learner driver
    February 22, 2012
    Regular readers of this page in World Highways will be familiar with a South Korean market trader who has clocked a record number of attempts at passing a driving test. The woman has finally passed after 950 attempts, having taken the written exam on a near-daily basis since April 2005. Although this written test requires a 60% pass mark she had repeatedly scored 30-50%. However, the 68 year old grandmother still needs to get behind the wheel to pass the practical portion of the test before being allowed a
  • Sheep in the city
    May 22, 2019
    Christmas follies Christmas congestion was caused in Cambridgeshire due to an errant Santa. Traffic was forced to halt on a busy stretch of road in the town of Wisbech after an inflatable Santa was blown from the house where it had been secured. The giant Santa inflatable came to rest on Cromwell road, lying on its side and appearing to wave drunkenly at vehicles passing in the opposite lane. Two men then managed to remove the giant inflatable from the roadway, allowing vehicles to pass. And an overze
  • Road maintenance crisis hits UK and US, as experts gather in Paris
    January 9, 2015
    The road maintenance crisis in the United Kingdom and the United States is deepening amid estimates that it will take millions of dollars to stop highway infrastructure from crumbling, including falling prey to potholes. A recent report by the BBC in the UK said that at least one municipal council, the city of Leeds, is facing a bill of nearly US$153 million to patch up its potholed roads. In the United States, Senator Bernie Sanders is t