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Medicine Transportation United Kingdom

E-Bike Injuries Are a Massive Burden, Say Surgeons 146

Surgeons in London report a surge in severe e-bike-related injuries, putting major strain on NHS trauma units. The BBC mentions a couple e-bike accidents overheard at the Royal London Hospital in Whitechapel. "A 32-year-old, fit and well student... a couple of days ago he fell off an e-bike sustaining a closed left tibial plateau fracture." Another case involved a little girl named Frida: "Six-year-old girl, she was hit by an electric bike, she has a closed tib/fib fracture." From the report: Surgeon Jaison Patel is seeing more and more cases like this. "It's a massive burden on our department and I'm sure it's the same across the whole of London," he tells us. "If we can reduce the number of patients coming in with these sorts of injuries it would be great for the patients obviously, but also takes massive pressure off us in the NHS."

Jaison deals with lower limb injuries. Just along the corridor his colleague Nick Aresti does the upper limbs. Nick explains that he is a cyclist himself, and it's something he encourages people to do for the benefit of their health. But, he has real concerns about e-bikes, and says: "What we've noticed with e-bikes is that the speed in which people are coming off is much higher and as a result, the injuries are much worse." He shows us X-rays of someone who has broken their collarbone. He explains that with e-bikes, the injuries they're seeing are much more severe, and as such, people are "struggling to get back to normality."

Nick and Jaison both agree it's something they're seeing increasingly more of as time goes by, and they think the industry needs better regulation. "We should do something about it, I don't think we can let this carry on," Jaison says. Over recent days of course, thousands of Londoners have taken to e-bikes to help beat the strikes. For many it has been an essential way to get about. Currently, anyone aged 14 or over can legally ride an e-bike. The power output of an e-bike's motor should be capped at 250 watts, and the motor should not be capable of propelling the bike any faster than 15.5mph (25kph), according to government rules.

London's Walking and Cycling Commissioner Will Norman says the rules need changing and says better regulation of the rentable electric bikes could be on the way. "We need to ensure that the vehicles are safe, that there's parking, they're not scattered all over the place, and that the batteries are safe," he says. "I'm really delighted that the government has now indicated in its English Devolution Bill that London and other cities across the UK will be getting more powers so again we can start regulating that, to ensure that they're safe for people to use and operate while they get around". The bill is currently going through parliament, and as yet there is no date for when it will be passed.
Duncan Dollimore, head of campaigns at Cycling UK, who are members of the Electric Bike Alliance, argues against the regulation of e-bike usage. "The cost of inactivity-related health issues to the NHS each year is 7.4 billion pounds, and people cycling saves them 1 billion pounds. We have seen a slight rise in the number of incidents involving hired e-bikes in London, but the health benefits of people cycling outweigh the risks by around 20 to one."
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E-Bike Injuries Are a Massive Burden, Say Surgeons

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  • by PDXNerd ( 654900 ) on Saturday September 13, 2025 @06:12AM (#65657262)

    This is the second anti-ebike article I've seen about London specifically in the last couple weeks - https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2025/sep/04/britains-e-bike-boom-desperation-delivery-drivers-and-unthinkable-danger [bbc.com]
     
    Feels like a build up to....charging more money -

    They just get on and ride around without insurance, tax, the bike not conforming to lights and everything else it should conform to, it’s not registered with the DVLA, all these things.”

    Basically they want them to be treated as mopeds, probably requiring insurance and registration and licensing. TBF it sounds like there's a lot of modified or illegal bikes in London (legal: an electric motor with a maximum power output of 250W, and a maximum assisted speed of 15.5mph. ASSIST meaning you have to pedal to get speed, not just hit a throttle button/lever). I mean it seems safer in places without dedicated bike lanes to be able to keep up with traffic, and if govt wants to reduce carbon output from cars this seems like making it easier, not impossible, to get these 'moped ebikes' is a no-brainer.

    • by PDXNerd ( 654900 )

      FFS I guess I copy/pasted the original article as the href = https://www.theguardian.com/li... [slashdot.org]> https://www.theguardian.com/li... [theguardian.com]

    • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Saturday September 13, 2025 @06:48AM (#65657302)

      This is the second anti-ebike article I've seen about London specifically in the last couple weeks

      That's because London has rubbish infrastructure making cyclists a menace out of necessity, either sharing a footpath (e-bikes are a legit danger to pedestrians due to their weight and speed), or sharing with the road (where e-bikes are less of a problem than normal bikes).

      Basically they want them to be treated as mopeds

      Regulations are important for any place. I see e-bikes from across the pond that absolutely I think should be outright fucking banned. Able to drive 40+km/h, able to do so without pedal assist (not an e-bike despite being sold as one, actually a moped), excessively heavy, shit breaks, and lights that are worse than a car with high-beams. This shit should be regulated, and I say that as an e-bike owner.

      In London you absolutely should have extra rules as well. Too many e-bikes are on pedestrian paths due to the aforementioned shit infrastructure. They absolutely should be forced to have public liability insurance. While it'll piss off the drivers, e-bikes should *NEVER* share foot paths. Normal city bikes on the other hand do far less damage in an accident.

      By the way the picture in your article shows a policeman with two "Fatbikes". They are specifically an illegal menace, and even places like the Netherlands which is a bit of a cycling Mecca, are attempting to ban them. https://www.iamexpat.nl/expat-... [iamexpat.nl]

      • by dargaud ( 518470 )
        [I bike a lot (no ebike though)]. More accidents with ebike, sure that's a given: they are heavier so in a collision will do more damage; many are unlocked and can go to 80kph and that's scary as shit on a footpath, and they are often driven by people who are not used to biking (old people with poor reflexes, mothers with 2 kids on the back seat...). As for banning those e-fatbikes, they are still way better than motorbikes (slower and quieter), so maybe just restrict them to roads.
        • 80kph- which are sure as shit allready illegal then and are classed as motorbikes - so why not enforce the existing laws, no , tax no insuranace no vehicle registration, likely no license, dangerous driving , speeding, no helmet and everything else they have in their locker to throw at motorists.
      • You can say the infrastructure is "shit" for ebikes, but how could it not be? It's a new class of vehicle, so people want it not to mix with pedestrians, and not to mix with cars. OK, so where do we paint lines for these new lanes exactly?

        Bicycles themselves have always had the same issue because of their small numbers - only a certain type of person commonly rides even 10+ miles consistently in a day. e-bikes could bring that to the masses with speeds that are less than scooters mixing with traffic bu

        • by AleRunner ( 4556245 ) on Saturday September 13, 2025 @10:44AM (#65657530)

          You can say the infrastructure is "shit" for ebikes, but how could it not be? It's a new class of vehicle, so people want it not to mix with pedestrians, and not to mix with cars. OK, so where do we paint lines for these new lanes exactly?

          This is really simple. A normal UK legal e-bike is fine (though maybe there should be a lower weight limit?). I can overtake it 90% of the time with no motor on anything other than a long hill climb. It can go on a bike lane. Anything else must follow motorcycle rules with licensing and everything. Then it goes on the normal road as a normal scooter or motorbike.

          Arrest and incarcerate for anything else.

          • Why the lower weight limit? ("Upper" weight limit maybe?)
            • yes, lower upper weight limit.

              (in other words, no more than 25kg or something - some of them are apparently up to 40kg where it really starts to matter)

        • by shilly ( 142940 )

          I love how you ask “but where could we put the infrastructure for e-bikes/bikes?” as though this is a really difficult problem no city has ever solved, studiously ignoring what’s been done in dozens of Dutch and Danish cities, in Vienna and Paris etc and that you think infrastructure for bikes is a question of painting lanes! I suspect default US mindset is happening

        • You can say the infrastructure is "shit" for ebikes, but how could it not be? It's a new class of vehicle

          No it's not. I didn't say the infrastructure is shit for ebikes. I said it's shit for cyclists. Ebikes are perfectly compatible with existing cycling infrastructure, and bicycles have existed longer than cars have.

          In most of the world where good bicycle infrastructure is in place that infrastructure is often used by limited mopeds, a class of vehicle that is heavier and faster than ebikes. There's nothing new about ebikes as a class of vehicle for any place with partially decent cycling infrastructure.

      • by thsths ( 31372 )

        > I see e-bikes from across the pond that absolutely I think should be outright fucking banned. Able to drive 40+km/h, able to do so without pedal assist (not an e-bike despite being sold as one, actually a moped), excessively heavy, shit breaks, and lights that are worse than a car with high-beams. This shit should be regulated, and I say that as an e-bike owner.

        These illegal electric motorcycles are common, but illegal on the road.

        There is no regulation necessary, because motor vehicle are illegal on t

    • by serviscope_minor ( 664417 ) on Saturday September 13, 2025 @07:23AM (#65657328) Journal

      The guardian article isn't anti e bike, but also you linked the wrong article.

      I agree that there is a problem with illegal ebikes: loads are being sold which aren't remotely road legal and have dangerously unsafe batteries. There's also a problem with companies like deliveroo which are relying on loopholes to avoid even minimum wage, so the people desperate enough to work there can only afford the illegal bikes from Amazon. The point of contractor rules wasn't so companies could avoid safety, insurance, legal vehicles, basic employee protection and so on. These are not professional contractors. And the solution to that isn't to make the regulations even laxer.

      The article and me aren't against legal ebikes, which is to say assistance limited to 15.5, mph and 250W of power, and with pedal assist only (no twist throttle).

      There are a lot of unregistered, illegal motorbikes. Amazon can apparently freely sell these because they are "just" a market place. The solution to a lack of dedicated bine infrastructure is to build dedicated car infrastructure, not to have unmaintained, dangerous motorbikes.

      Wait what, dedicated car infrastructure?

      Yeah. You only need segregation when there are too many cars. On neighborhood roads that don't have through traffic, cars and bikes can mix safely. You only need infrastructure to stop drivers killing cyclists when the driving becomes a problem. So really it's infrastructure for cars because you only need it when there are too many cars, driving too badly.

    • by MightyMartian ( 840721 ) on Saturday September 13, 2025 @08:05AM (#65657356) Journal

      I'd just like them banned from walking paths. At least once a day I'm getting some crazy asshole ringing his bell as he comes flying up behind me. I'm not a fan of any kind of bike on walking paths, but at least the people on regular bikes have more control. The worst are probably older riders who often seem like they're barely in control. And the three wheeled ones take up outrageous amounts of space on smaller paths, regularly forcing other users on some of the narrower paths I frequent to get to the side of the road.

      It's hard to imagine, short of motor vehicles, anything more hazardous to a pedestrian than some stupid prick on an e-bike.

      • The worst are probably older riders who often seem like they're barely in control.

        I can tell you live in a place where cycling is not common. Where it is, the worst are kids. 14 year olds on ebikes. Older people at least usually manage their speed somewhat.

    • Would treating them as mopeds be so bad?

      What weâ(TM)re looking at is exactly what happened when gasoline cars started to become popular and created problems with deaths, injuries, and property damage. The answer to managing those problems and providing accountability was to make the vehicles display registration plates, require licensing of drivers, and enforcing minimum safety standards on cars. Iâ(TM)m not necessarily suggesting all these things should be done to e-bikes, but I donâ(TM)t se

      • Would treating them as mopeds be so bad?

        Road legal e-bikes with a 15mph speed limit are literally too slow. They would be in danger if forced to follow moped rules all the time. If you think about that, you will realize that most of the e-bikes you have seen are illegal.

    • by thsths ( 31372 )

      The article is shit.

      It confuses pedelecs, which are tightly regulated and limited to 15mph, with illegal electric motorcycles.

      While pedelecs have some risk for injury, it is really not much different from a bicycle.

      Illegal electric motorcycles, on the other hand, are more dangerous than motorcycles. Which should not be surprising.

      Obviously, banning pedelecs is not going to solve the problem of illegal electric motorcycles.

    • by mspohr ( 589790 )

      Switzerland has had compulsory insurance for all bicycles for many years. You just buy an annual sticker for the bike (about 50 Francs).
      Seemed reasonable to cover liability and injuries.
      e-bikes have some special risks... mostly clueless people who ride them at high speed... it seems education and regulation would be effective here just as we educate and regulate cars and trucks.

    • by drnb ( 2434720 ) on Saturday September 13, 2025 @12:05PM (#65657674)

      Basically they want them to be treated as mopeds, probably requiring insurance and registration and licensing.

      Well aren't they? It's about speed and performance, carbon output does not change this. I'm old enough to remember moped "popularity". I will deny ever riding one, thank god everyone wasn't carrying a camera back then. :-) When e-bikes came on the scene and suddenly, "overnight" seeming, all the kids on the block were riding e-bikes, my first thought was "huh, mopeds have gone electric". Gas -> Electric doesn't change this. New spin on old idea.

    • Thats usually where these sorts of accidents happen in my experience. I ride an escooter, and here in australia the speed limits 25km/h on an escooter. Thats a pretty good limit. At 25km/h most crashes are just ouchies. Scratches, bruises, but rarely anything more serious than that unless you collide with a car or human. If the cops catch you with a scooter going faster, they can confiscate it and under anti hooligan laws (originally designed to go after illegal drag racers) can confiscate and destroy the s

  • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Saturday September 13, 2025 @06:37AM (#65657282)

    It's a shithouse infrastructure injury. Painting a little symbol on the road does not make cycling infrastructure. When given the choice between driving with cars or driving with pedestrians in either case injuries will be high as an excessive amount of attention needs to be paid to those who the pathway is shared with.

    You don't see "excessive" injuries in the Netherlands, and that's a place with less requirements to wear safety gear. Sure there's always an increase in injury due to speed and weight of e-bikes, but that should be minor, not excessive if your infrastructure is properly set up for it.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday September 13, 2025 @07:17AM (#65657318)

      You don't see "excessive" injuries in the Netherlands,

      Says who? The number of bike road accidents leading to serious injuries has been steadily increasing in the past few years.

      https://swov.nl/en/fact-sheet/... [swov.nl]

      The increase is mostly attributed to older idiots killing or injuring themselves in e-bikes, or young rascals riding e-bikes injuring older people.

      • Unless the numbers are per distance ridden, we do not know anything. Motorcycles on a spring day in may appear to death machines, but 45% of the miles put on a motorcycle are on a spring day the hospitalizations on a calendar numbers mean virtually nothing. With every ebike having an app attached, and each user phone has a map app at least attempt to get a per mile ridden. This is where jornalism has fallen apart, one study is news article, with no good questions as the counter point. Why does
      • Says who? The number of bike road accidents leading to serious injuries has been steadily increasing in the past few years.

        https://swov.nl/en/fact-sheet/... [swov.nl]

        I'm not sure what argument you think you're making, but the statistics page you are pointing to talks about road accidents in general. Bike injuries rose along with car injuries in a similar way. In fact the site even points out that the percentage of incidents involving bikes is quite steady over the past decade showing that e-bikes aren't magically making the numbers rise, but rather cars contribute a lot. The entire basis for that site is the motor vehicle crash database. It contributes the most to under

  • by Going_Digital ( 1485615 ) on Saturday September 13, 2025 @07:18AM (#65657320)

    This is simply a case of Idiots doing idiotic things.

    The first problem e-bike or not is people gettIng on their bike for the first time in years with a level of confidence that far exceeds their ability, due to being out of practice. The do things like underestimate stopping distances at speed, as well as being unaware of dangers, when you cycle regularly you are on the lookout for danger.

    The next problem is simply there are far too many inconsiderate people in urban environments. Mindless pedestrians looking at their phones instead of where they are going stepping out in front of you. Delivery van drivers and parents taking their kids to school in their 4x4 using cycling lanes as parking spaces. Cyclists wobbling all over the place and ignoring traffic laws, riding on pavements, the wrong way down cycle lanes and most frustrating ignoring red lights and failing to give way to pedestrians at crossings.

    Finally there is a massive problem with illegal bikes, with high powered motors, that propel the bike at speeds far higher than the legal limit as well as not requiring the rider to pedal. The worst offenders are food delivery riders, that get paid by the delivery, so they zoom around at top speed, ignoring all tules, going on pavements to get past stationary traffic with earbuds in and often using their ordering app on a phone attached to the handlebars. The police do nothing, they even get their doughnuts delivered to their office by these riders and do nothing. Regular confiscation of these illegal bikes would be a good starting point.

    • The police do confiscate them. They even had several bigger operations in London and Manchester in the oast few months.

      But you're right - delivery riders make the majority of the offenders. In their books time is money and untill we disincentive illegal bikes, the riders will use them. The chances of getting caught are low. The payouts are high. Simple economics. Confiscations and fines are just the cost of business.

      Perhaps it's the delivery companies who should be given more responsibility.

      If we had a law

      • There is never the discussion that cities are too dense, and that the UK is the prime example of not enough space to build, not enough green space accessible per child. That the entire nation is constantly wet and has eternal slime on sidewalks and roads, and then paints every single thing on the roads. High powered bicycles and livestock are a problem in scotland, just like with motorcycles and cars, but nobody in rural lands is going to say spend another 30 minutes at 20km/hr instead of 80km/hr in th
    • If I ever see a car fully change lanes like they are supposed to when overtaking a cyclist legally riding in a traffic lane, I'll eat my hat. Police do nothing. What we should do is confiscate the automobiles who fail to obey the law, right?

  • by HuskyDog ( 143220 ) on Saturday September 13, 2025 @07:20AM (#65657322) Homepage

    So, riders and pedestrians are being injured more due to the higher speeds of e-bikes than ordinary bicycles? But, it also says that e-bikes should be limited to 15mph when propelled by the motor.

    You need to spend no more than a couple of minutes in any built-up area in the UK to see that many of the alleged 'e-bikes' are vastly more powerful than that. They are quite obviously unlicensed electrically powered motorbikes with some entirely nugatory pedals added.

    So, the conclusion we should reach is that if you allow huge numbers of people to suddenly ride motorbikes without any training, protective clothing or requirement to obey any traffic rules then many of them - and any unfortunate pedestrian who can't jump out of the way in time - will receive serious injuries. Why is this surprising?

    • The operative word here is "should". I see a lot of imported drives that have no restrictions and with them bikes can fly with 40 km/h or more. Not only can they fly, they do fly. Then there's the riding style - it is not uncommon these days to see teenagers in a big, 4+ lane road riding an ebike or one of these smaller wheel contraptions, the electric scooters, sometimes against the traffic and in the fast lane.

      It is insane.

      • Whats wrong with being on the street at over 20-40km/hr. Its not like traffic moves much quicker than that for the dense parts of England. The empire imported everything else from India, survival techniques of the people of India on scooters in mixed traffic is the last thing? Who knew?
    • some entirely nugatory pedals added.

      Think of them as the blades on a chariot wheel.

  • by gaiageek ( 1070870 ) on Saturday September 13, 2025 @07:40AM (#65657342)
    ... to pedestrians in cities with high foot and cycling traffic.

    I spend a lot of time in a major European city which has dedicated bike lanes on most major streets. I get around by walking and using a regular bicycle.

    I now consider e-bikes to be the most likely vehicle I'm going to be hit by, either as a pedestrian or a biker, because they're fast and often times *practically silent*. As a pedestrian, the sidewalk and bike lines in this city are often both part of the same stretch of "sidewalk" where the bike lane is only designated by a line or the use of different bricks. This means that bikes and pedestrians are sharing the same space, and bikers often go out of the bike lane to pass other bikers, putting them in very close proximity to pedestrians and what are now very high e-bike speeds. Someone moving unexpectedly, or a child suddenly bolting from behind a walking parent, could mean a serious accident. It can be argued that this is an infrastructure problem, but even if you create completely separated bike lanes, you still have the issue of silence combined with high speed (and mass) relative to other cyclists: The other day I was biking on a quiet off-street with no other traffic on the road. Out of nowhere, a food delivery e-biker flew past my left side at easily twice my speed. The sound of the air passing my ears from casually cycling was enough to cover what little sound his bike made such that I never heard him coming, and had I veered left from my course just before he passed, I'm certain I would've ended up in the emergency room.

    The food delivery e-bikers are a huge part of the problem: they're under pressure to go fast, which means they're also more likely to take risks, and even if they see need to stop, they're moving the extra weight of their delivery plus the heavier bike itself (battery, larger frame, often big tires) to hinder a fast stop.

    With all this in mind, I'm of the opinion that 1. e-bikes should only be allowed on actual roads (not bike paths), because any law saying "certain e-bikes" or even having a speed limit on a bike path would be extremely difficult to enforce, plus these e-bikes are often traveling at the same speed as cars, and 2. e-bike drivers should require a license, *at least* for commercial use, i.e. food delivery, which must be verified by the company, with steps taken to ensure the registered driver is the one doing the actual deliveries (so no one can "borrow" a friend's delivery account), and a visibly displayed license on the bike.

    TL;DR: e-bikes are now as fast as mopeds but silent, and should be treated as such.
    • It's funny because bike messengers were legendary (notorious) even before e-bikes.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

      • In your linked video, the guy is on the road with regular traffic, which is exactly what I'm saying e-bikes should be doing.
    • I now consider e-bikes to be the most likely vehicle I'm going to be hit by, either as a pedestrian or a biker, because they're fast and often times *practically silent*.

      A conventional bike can be faster than a legal e-bike and is just as silent. I used to cycle at speeds of up to 38 mph (never had a bike that wouldn't start to shake too hard at that speed to go faster) and the only time my e-bike ever reached that speed was on a long steep hill. I've had groups of cyclists going by me on a shared path with a 15 kmh speed limit doing about 3 times that yell at me (doing 15) "Your dangerous on here", who was the dangerous one? Me obeying the law or them at 3 times the spe

      • I used to cycle at speeds of up to 38 mph

        And I bet your bike weighed 20 lbs. or less, vs. an e-bike with an average weight of 50+ lbs., some of them up to 80 lbs. plus whatever additional weight for their cube-shaped food delivery containers and contents.

        Regardless, at that speed, I'd argue you should be on the main road as well, or at least nowhere where you might be come within a couple feet of an unsuspecting pedestrian at 38 mph..

  • I know the UK and other EU countries (I think) have very oppressive licensing laws concerning motorcycles and the size of bike you can ride, based on "experience".

    What laws do they have concerning e-bikes? Do they require licensing? If not, maybe they should, just like they do with motorcycles.

    Here is some reading material for those who are interested:
    https://www.autoevolution.com/... [autoevolution.com]

    • Re:Oppressive idea (Score:5, Informative)

      by CompMD ( 522020 ) on Saturday September 13, 2025 @08:55AM (#65657388)

      I live in Sweden and have an e-bike that is legally regulated as a moped, a Specialized Turbo Vado 6. It came with a CoC for submission to the transport agency for license plates and it has a VIN decal behind the head. The bike comes with a license plate mount. It also has a moped grade headlight with high-beam, hydraulic disc brakes, and an electric horn. It has no throttle, but it does have pedal assist up to 45km/h. To ride it, you need an AM-class drivers license and moped insurance. It looks like a bicycle, rides like a bicycle, but definitely should not be ridden by someone who does not have moped experience. I'm perfectly ok with the regulation on it.

      • As far as you know, is Sweden atypical in this regard? Or is this common Europe wide? What about UK specifically, which the article is focused on?

        • by thsths ( 31372 )

          The same applies across Europe, the regulations are grounded in EU and very similar across countries.

          The outrage in the article is synthetic. I call to make something illegal that is already illegal. (Electric motorcycles that have no type approval, no insurance, and no business in public.)

    • by pjt33 ( 739471 )

      Regulations may have changed, but in 2019 I was able to rent an e-bike in France with no licensing requirements. It wasn't as restricted as in the UK either: with the electric assist the highest speed I reached was just over 40 kph. (It was, however, assist, unlike some of the bikes under discussion).

    • Don't be daft the laws here aren't oppressive. Yeah you have to demonstrate done sort of competence to drive different kinds of motor vehicle with different characteristics on pubic roads.

      The laws on ebikes are simple. They must have pedal assist. They must have no more than 250W of power. Electric assist cannot exceed 15.5mph. ebikes are then regulated otherwise exactly as push bikes.

      Anything outside that is a motorbike and requires insurance, a licensed driver, and most be roadworthy in all the legally de

  • What annoys me most is that motorized electric vehicles are allowed in pedestrian spaces. This should be changed.
  • by Monoman ( 8745 ) on Saturday September 13, 2025 @09:02AM (#65657398) Homepage

    e-bikes have greater acceleration and top speed than traditional bicycles. It is a recipe for increased rider injuries and deaths. Letting them in pedestrian spaces increases their collateral damage.

    • Here is where the US legal system shows its world dominance on changing of behavior.

      If it does not have an insurance requirement it is generally stuck on the sidewalk or the slowest of surface streets. City police fill their day with control of something that truely does not need control. Simply add an insurance requirement, add a plate and the rider will have to move to the street and 60km/hr will be normal speed in a 40km/hr. A scooter never was a high bar, it was what you gave to a teenager to g
      • by TWX ( 665546 )

        If it does not have an insurance requirement it is generally stuck on the sidewalk or the slowest of surface streets.

        I have no idea where you got this notion from. Where I live, bicycles are not supposed to ride on sidewalks, because bicycles are classed as vehicles. They're supposed to be ridden on the street, and in the correct direction of travel for the side of the street that they're on. In some cities even vehicles as minimal as skateboards are supposed to be on the street, not on the sidewalk, and there may be requirements to dismount any 'vehicle' when using a crosswalk except on special-purpose multi-use paths

    • Not legal ones where I live. Sure unregistered illegal electric motorcycles do...

      For some reason Amazon can sell these with no penalty and delivery companies can structure their business so use of one is almost mandatory.

  • There's a surge in e-bike-related injuries everywhere. The main problem is teenagers in the streets with motorized vehicles that can self-propel, making slowing down for dangerous situations or stopping at stop signs an inconvenience. The natural consequence is they don't slow down or stop, when they would do so if the bike was not self-propelled.

    • I see many, many adults on regular bikes speed through intersections too.

      From my observations around this city, when confronted with a stop sign at an intersection, I'd say the odds of the cyclist blowing through it without even slowing down are 2:1. The odds of them blowing through it while slowing down slightly are 4:1. The odds of them slowing down substantially, but not coming to a complete stop like they're supposed to, are 8:1.

      Overall? The odds of a cyclist coming to a complete stop at a stop sign, as

      • by spitzak ( 4019 )

        It is considerably safer to treat stop signs as yield signs for (human-powered) bicycles. By far the most dangerous thing at intersections is being hit by cross traffic while they are moving at the low speed that they have to from a stop. Some states have decided to rewrite the laws for yield-on-red.

        Some e-bikes certainly have enough acceleration that this is not a problem. IMHO these should be subject to motorcycle regulations and this also means they must travel in the car lanes.

  • by too2late ( 958532 ) on Saturday September 13, 2025 @09:09AM (#65657406) Journal
    E-bikes ARE mopeds by definition. MOter / PEDal powered vehicles. They should be regulated as such.
  • This is what happens when people don't have to worry about paying for the results of their own actions.
  • by Misagon ( 1135 ) on Saturday September 13, 2025 @09:36AM (#65657446)

    There are different types of electric bikes.

    Some jurisdictions restrict electric bicycles to those with "electric assist", where you'd still have to crank the pedals to make the motor run. Those are more or less operated like regular pedal-powered bikes but you won't have to be an athlete to get up a slope.
    I don't think that type is the one called out here.

    Any type where a motor is controlled by a "throttle" is actually a moped, and should be legally classified as a moped IMHO.

    And neither mopeds or bicycles should be allowed to run at speed on a pedestrian path. If it is not a road or bicycle path, you should first not be there unless there is an alternative, and you are restricted to walking speed, regardless of vehicle. That is often the law.

    There are many places where regulations originally for scooters for disabled people have been misapplies to newer types of electric vehicles that hadn't been envisioned yet when the rules were put in place.
    Especially companies renting out electric kick-bikes have been taking advantage of that type of loophole, in too many cities. Those are the most dangerous of all: high centre of mass, small wheels, large mass because it is a rental vehicle and must be sturdy, and used by people that aren't used to bicycles and somehow think they are infinitesimally narrow and can move like pedestrians -- only faster.

  • by registrations_suck ( 1075251 ) on Saturday September 13, 2025 @09:47AM (#65657452)

    I recently got a mobility scooter. Its speed is limited to 4mph.

    Maybe e-bikes should be limited thusly. Slow everyone the fuck down.

    • I recently got a mobility scooter. Its speed is limited to 4mph.

      They don't even let you move at a full adult male walking pace? I can go 5 mph without trouble.

    • >"I recently got a mobility scooter. Its speed is limited to 4mph. Maybe e-bikes should be limited thusly. Slow everyone the fuck down."

      Um, 4mph is unreasonably low for any type of bicycle. That is just brisk walking speed. Had you said 10mph, I would probably agree. One of the purposes of riding a bike instead of walking is save some significant time.

      In any case, if it is a true "e-bike" then you can't really limit speed, you can just limit how much assistance to pedaling effort. So a 10mph limit w

    • Maybe they should do this for cars as well. For safety.

  • I have been riding a bike since I was four or five years old (I don't remember exactly).
    I tried the eBikes at work once (I had an outside-appointment at a place not easily reachable by public transport). The go up to 45km/h.
    It's insane. I don't have a motor-cycle license and never ridden one - but I would assume it's not much different.
    There's very little margin of error there and no crash crumple-zone like in a car except your own body.

    My commute involves a downhill-section (on public road) that I can reac

    • 50km/hr.... That is downwind in flat midwest america, where the only bicycle injuries of note are cars not yeilding at our high tech replacements for traffic circles, 4 way stops. What the hell you all running into, sheep and old guys crossing the street? Or is it the all people you invited in to provide cheap labor?
      • It's a somewhat winded road in the city, with cars around you and a bus-stop in the middle of the road. At the end of the road is a roundabout with backed-up traffic and a gas-station with cross-traffic, sometimes (which I had to find out the hard way).

        It's not in the US, of course.

    • Catching a tailwind on a bicycle with a downhill 90km/hr isnt a speed that anyone cannot control, especially since breaks are hub mounted on most fun things these days. The pedestrian stepping off the curb is the problem and always has been. The pedestrian always has some fault when it is a truck, bus, car. But shared fault when it is a bike or a fork lift, we have put a class of viechale having more responsibly a bar that the cyclist can never clear while riding down the center of a road. I was 20
      • I'm primarily interested in my own well-being.

        Who wants a tombstone with the engraving "...but he had the right of way!"?

  • But the problem I saw with these in America was when they were widely available for rent people who weren't used to riding them would jump right on them and go full throttle.

    If you've never taken a bike up to 20 mph it's very different than riding it at 5 to 10. I used to cycle a lot and could reliably hit 15 mph and downhill could hit 25. You need practice and control to do that.

    That was a powered bike and I have the common sense when I was learning to limit my speed. Going down some of the steeper
  • In most motorcycles accidents between cars and motorcycles--it is usually the car driver that is at fault.
  • EV's like the Tesla are not that green. The power has to come from somewhere. If on Tesla Plaid owner leaves their car home--750 ebikes could be powered.
  • If only there were a name for two wheeled vehicles with a motor, and maybe some rules about safety gear and where they could be ridden.

    Actual ebikes might as well not exist. There are plenty of electric motorcycles with pedals out there, but the number of actual ebikes is miniscule. I can't recall the last time I saw one doing anywhere close to a legal speed.

    Everytime I see a kid fly by at 50+kph with, at best, a bicycle helmet, and occasionally unhelmeted while wearing flip flops, I wonder why you can stil

  • If you fly off a bike at 50 kph it dies not matter in the slightest whether you were on a 750 pound cruiser or a tiny e-bike.

    E-bikes are under regulated.

  • Are e-bikes even a form of exercise?

    Sure, putting in the effort to pedal yourself along is great for your health. Is moving your feet a bit while an electric motor moves you along the same?

    If being propelled along on two wheels by a motor led to good health, motorbikers would be the fittest people in the UK. I don't think that's quite true...

  • People can substitute cars with ebikes so the poorer and frugal can use that for mobility. That is a big problem for the car industry, transportation industry and taxes collected.

    If people don't drive cars, it is a major problem to the industries that are build around everyone driving cars.

    Cars kill and injure people at unprecedented rates but that is just the price everyone is willing to pay.

    This is why public transportation, cycling infrastructure was attacked and demonized all the time.

    This is coming at

I never cheated an honest man, only rascals. They wanted something for nothing. I gave them nothing for something. -- Joseph "Yellow Kid" Weil

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