What's new

Sharing Economy Sees Rapid Growth in China

3,300 round-trips to the moon: Chinese shared bike mileage tops 2.5 billion kilometers
By Jiang Jie (People's Daily Online) 15:40, April 21, 2017

FOREIGN201704211540000509413513951.jpg

File photo

As China regains its historic bike-friendly reputation with the bike-sharing app boom, a recent report stated that the distance ridden on shared bikes in China has surpassed 2.5 billion kilometers, which is equal to 3,300 round-trip journeys from Earth to the moon.

The report, compiled by bike-sharing giant Mobike and Beijing Tsinghua University Institute of Planning and Design, pointed out that the multi-billion-kilometer milestone also means the avoidance of 170,000 car trips' worth of carbon emissions, which would have churned out 4.5 billion micrograms of PM2.5.

As bike use continues to grow, cities can also save space on parking, the report noted. In Beijing, the parking spaces saved could potentially be as large as five National Stadiums. In Shanghai, that figure could equal 15 People’s Parks.

Bike trips have doubled since 2015. Some 11.6 percent of trips in cities that offer bike-sharing services were made by bike, while 26.6 percent were made by car. However, before the popularization of bike-sharing apps, those figures were 5.5 and 29.8 percent respectively.

Bigger cities have also demonstrated different characteristics when it comes to shared-bike use, according to the report. Specifically, Beijing is the “earliest city,” with residents flocking to use the bikes during the early-morning rush hour, while Shenzhen is the “city of night,” as night time bike rides there outnumber those in other cities.

.
 
.
This industry is still new, so I expect a lot of trial and error.

=======
Chinese cities draft rules to regulate bike-sharing industry
(CRI Online) 09:51, April 23, 2017

Beijing authorities on Friday issued a drafted citywide rule to regulate the unfettered bike-sharing industry, making the city the fifth Chinese metropolis to lay out concrete requirements in the area, following Shenzhen, Chengdu, Shanghai and Nanjing.

7859899735081676953.jpg

Shared bikes on Chinese streets. [File Photo: Chinanews.com]


Below is a list of major areas addressed by the regulation.


Focus 1: Deposit Management

Most bike-sharing companies in China may charge a deposit to initiate service, and the supervision of the fund remains a hot topic. Numerous cities plan to introduce third-party supervision.

18306018425490124015.jpg

Shared bikes on Chinese streets. [File Photo: Chinanews.com]

In the newly issued trial document, Beijing requires bike-sharing startups to open special accounts in the city for the deposits they've charged.

The operations office of the People's Bank of China shall take the supervision and management responsibilities for these special accounts so as to prevent and control capital risks.

The companies are obliged to keep the public informed of their time limit for refund and return deposits to users in time.

All refunds should be returned before a firm exits from the bike-sharing market. A public notification is also demanded.

Mobike and ofo, two leading Chinese bike-sharing companies, have responded to the official regulation, expressing a supportive attitude to the rules, in addition to promising to ensure the security of their customers' capital.

Shenzhen, capital of southeast China's Guangdong province, and Shanghai, the largest bike-sharing city in the world – a title claimed by local government last December, have previously announced third-party supervision policies. The latter also requires usage reports of the money and at the same time stipulates that deposits shall be returned within seven days upon request.


Focus 2: Client Security

Along with the spectacularly multiplied fleet of shared bikes have come not only more convenience for commuters but also increasing related traffic accidents, especially those involving children under 12.

10811193552941017236.jpg

Shared bikes on Chinese streets. [File Photo: Chinanews.com]

Under security considerations, Beijing authorities are placing an emphasis on strengthening insurance claims mechanism for customers and quality inspection for shared bicycles in service.

The draft document is also recommending and encouraging companies to purchase personal accident insurance and third party liability insurance for their clients.

Active assistance should also be provided by enterprises when their users require insurance claims.

Bicycles should be put into use according to relevant legal and technical requirements, equipped with GPS systems.

Bikes in service need to be tested regularly, and those unqualified must be removed in time to ensure safety.

When accidents occur, the division of responsibility should be in compliance with the assertion identified by transport authorities. Users who break relevant regulations will face both credit loss and administrative penalties.

In Chengdu, capital of southwest China's Sichuan province, city officials are also urging insurance purchases and have set up a certain sum of compensation.

Shenzhen and Nanjing, capital of east China's Jiangsu province, clearly demand insurance purchases. The latter has also required the submission of quality examination reports of the shared bikes to local authorities.

According to rules published by Shanghai authorities, shared bikes in service must keep a serviceability rate of 95%, and broken bicycles must be removed within 48 hours. A maintenance crew must be provided, capable of servicing no less than 5% of the total number of bikes in service.


Focus 3: Parking Management

The "stationless" shared-bikes in Chinese metropolitan cities have caused troubles like traffic jams, confusion in parking and vandalism, which constitute the most critical part of the program.

17439716906002007588.jpg

Shared bikes on Chinese streets. [File Photo: Chinanews.com]

Beijing recommends that bike-sharing companies make use of electronic maps to mark parking and no-parking areas. Users guilty of illegal parking have risk of being blacklisted.

Shenzhen and Nanjing have also promulgated measures to ask users to park properly, thus preventing large numbers of bikes from disturbing others.

.
 
.
Ofo partners with leading Chinese bike manufacturer
By Ouyang Shijia | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2017-04-20

a41f726b08411a626acb20.jpg

Riders scan ofo bikes in Xi'an, Shaanxi province. [Photo/China Daily]


Chinese bike-hire startup ofo has signed a deal with Tianjin Fuji-Ta Bicycle to expand its fleet.

Under the partnership, announced on Wednesday, Fuji-Ta, a leading Chinese bicycle manufacturer, will add about 10 production lines for ofo's shared bicycles, with an annual production capability of more than 10 million units.

Fuji-Ta said the deal will almost double its annual bicycle production capability to more than 20 million units by 2017, up from 12 million units in 2016.

Dai Wei, founder and CEO of ofo, said the deal will help the Beijing-based firm expand its presence in both the domestic and global market.

"Today, China produces more than 70 percent of the bikes in the world. And China has gained advantages in the complete bike supply chain system and lower cost of making bikes."

"With expanded production capability, we will gain more strengths to enter and compete in the global market. "

Dai added that Fuji-Ta's overseas footprint will also help ofo to compete in the global market.

Starting off on college campuses in 2014, ofo now operates in 81 cities globally and is one of the largest bike-sharing service providers, valued at more than $2 billion, according to the company.

It is locked in a fierce battle with its rival Mobike. In January, Mobike signed an exclusive deal with Foxconn Technology Group, aiming to double its annual bicycle production capability to more than 10 million units.

Ofo and Fuji-Ta also announced the launch of a global research and development center for shared bikes, to offer more tailor-made bikes to meet different global needs.
 
.
For example,Montreal is the best bike city in America but it less than Beijing,
Green travel, fitness, convenience
,Hope all the world's cities can build more bike lanes.
 
.
Umbrellas the latest trend in China’s sharing economy

Convenience brollies just the latest offering as consumers embrace the shared economy

PUBLISHED : Tuesday, 09 May, 2017, 2:55pm
UPDATED : Tuesday, 09 May, 2017, 3:41pm
Commuters across China have readily hopped on the bike sharing craze, and now a new sharing economy trend will keep them from ever getting caught in the rain, mainland media reported.

Major Chinese cities have rolled out shared-umbrella schemes, in which customers rent brollies by paying a refundable deposit and scanning a QR code.

Molisan, the Shanghai-based umbrella rental start-up, has launched trials in the metro systems in Guangzhou, China’s third largest city, and Fuzhou, the capital of Fujian province.

At least six stations on the Guangzhou Metro have adopted the scheme, which charges a 20 yuan (US$2.90) deposit payable via WeChat, according to the Information Times.

The rental period is 15 days, which renters can renew for three additional days after which they will be charged a late penalty of 0.5 yuan per day.

“This is very convenient, and doesn’t require registering personal information,” the paper quoted an umbrella rental user as saying. “After you’re done using the umbrella, you can also get the deposit back at any time.”

07c383b6-3465-11e7-8663-b22bc7352b12_1320x770_154107.JPG


The company said is likely to expand into Shenzhen, the thriving special economic zone next to Hong Kong, after they get the Guangzhou operation up and running, according to local news site Panyu.com. Molisan is expected to provide between 500,000 and one million umbrellas in Guangzhou this year.

Although some internet users raised concerns about customers damaging umbrellas or not returning them at all, others cheered the idea of shared umbrellas, noting their convenience.

“This idea is pretty good, sometimes when you leave the house you’ll run into these situations,” one user said.

“Communist values are here,” another joked.

“Sharing umbrellas is a sign of progress in public service, and a show of human care, releasing the warmth of the city,” an editorial in the state-run People’s Daily said.

China has caught the sharing economy bug, as its streets fill up with public bicycles, smartphone users rent portable battery packs, and even high schools rent basketballs.

Consumers are increasingly seeing the sharing economy as a way to reduce waste and avoid clutter, according to a PricewaterhouseCoopers report.

“Besides a growing appetite for a more minimalist lifestyle, consumers say these sharing-based services offer better pricing, more convenient access, and more choice in the marketplace,” the report said.

http://www.scmp.com/news/china/society/article/2093557/chinese-commuters-open-rented-umbrellas
 
.
What's hot in China's sharing economy

2017-05-10 15:50

chinadaily.com.cn Editor: Feng Shuang

Editor's Note: The bike-sharing industry has brought many lifestyle changes in China. But also importantly, the business has inspired entrepreneurs in other industries. From basketball to umbrella, let's take a look at what's hot in the booming sharing sector.

201751015508.jpg

Riders scan ofo bikes in Xi'an, Shaanxi province. (Photo/China Daily)

Bike-sharing


While bike-sharing is no rarity in other parts of the world, the Chinese version has given a whole new meaning to the concept, with customers able to pick a bike anywhere in the city (thanks to the GPS-enabled app) and leave it anywhere at the end of their journey.

The concept is all the rage among students and young professionals across the nation for being convenient, green and cheap. An average 30-minute ride costs 0.5 yuan ($7 cents) to one yuan.

Shared bikes have become the newest battlefield for global capital, with large amounts of investment flowing into the billing-on-time bike-rental mobile applications.

2017510154853.jpg

People rent Umbrellas at a metro station in Guangzhou, South China's Guangdong province. (Photo/Weibo)

Umbrella-sharing


Molisan, a Shanghai-based start-up, has launched umbrella-sharing services in the metro in Guangzhou, South China's Guangdong province, and Fuzhou, East China's Fujian province.

Customers can rent umbrellas by paying a refundable deposit and scanning a QR code.

The scheme charges a 20 yuan ($2.90) deposit payable via WeChat. The rental period is 15 days, which renters can renew for three additional days after which they will be charged a late penalty of 0.5 yuan per day.

2017510154819.jpg

People can find nearby charging stations through app, as well as WeChat and Alipay accounts. (Photo/sina.com.cn)

Charger-sharing


Xiaodian, a phone charger start-up, recently announced a $50 million Series B financial round led by Sequoia China Capital and Banyan Capital, with Tencent as a participating investor.

People can find the company's nearby charging stations through its app, as well as WeChat and Alipay accounts.

After scanning a QR code, users can start charging their phones. Payment is processed through WeChat Pay or Alipay.

2017510154717.jpg

A basketball-sharing locker is seen in Jiaxing, Zhejiang province. (Photo/Weibo)

Basketball-sharing


A company in Jiaxing, East China's Zhejiang province, recently launched a basketball-sharing service.

The company has introduced several pilot lockers with basketballs at the city's public and campus courts. Users can borrow and return a basketball through the company's WeChat account after paying a 29-yuan ($4.2) deposit. One basketball costs 1.5 yuan for half an hour.

The lockers are equipped with a camera to ensure the process runs smoothly. According to the company, the lockers can also be used to store personal items.

http://www.ecns.cn/business/2017/05-10/256861.shtml
 
.
Besieged by bicycles

2017-05-11 10:12

Global Times Editor: Li Yan

U542P886T1D256964F12DT20170511101436.jpeg

Shared bikes lean against each other in front of SKP shopping mall in Beijing on Monday. (Photo: Zhang Hongpei/GT)

With bike sharing's success, cities grappling with sprawl of cycles clogging the sidewalks

China's bike-sharing companies have found that success breeds its own set of challenges. As bike-sharing's popularity has skyrocketed, Chinese cities have strained to deal with the sprawling masses of shared bicycles that surround many bus and subway stations at rush hours, blocking pedestrian and vehicle traffic. Bike-sharing companies have hired workers to organize their bicycles. Several cities have instituted regulations to deal with the problem. Yet the situation has left some wondering if bike sharing can be regulated without killing the convenience that has made it a success.

A worker surnamed Xue stacked yellow bikes onto the bed of his electric three-wheeler on Monday afternoon outside the East Bawangfen bus station in Beijing's Chaoyang district.

The bus station serves as a popular transfer point for residents who commute downtown from Beijing's Tongzhou district or Yanjiao township, North China's Hebei Province.

Xue's employer, bike-sharing company Ofo, posted him there after the bus station found itself besieged by masses of shared bicycles, which spilled out onto the roadway, sometimes blocking buses from leaving the station.

"Many shared bikes tend to get dumped outside the station around 6:30 pm, the period when people arrive to catch their buses home," Xue told the Global Times on Monday.

Xue then started up his vehicle to ship Ofo's bright yellow bicycles to another part of the town.

"We need to transport Ofo bikes from one site to another about a dozen times during each eight-hour work shift," he said.

Bike-sharing start-ups like Ofo and Beijing Mobike Technology Co have had to establish on-the-ground maintenance teams to deal with the mounting problems of illegally parked and inconveniently placed bicycles that have accompanied China's bike-sharing boom, the companies' spokespeople have said.

The situation illustrates one of the problems that has emerged with the lightning-fast growth of China's bike-sharing industry, which has left companies and local governments scrambling to solve the issue without sacrificing the convenience that has made bike sharing such a success.

Parking problems

It has become commonplace in major cities to see row upon row of bikes parked outside shopping malls and metro stations, which often disrupt both pedestrian and vehicle traffic.

A dearth of designated parking space for bikes is one of the problems. On Tuesday, a 32-year-old Beijing resident surnamed Hai had spent several minutes looking for a place to park his bike around Beiyuan Subway Station in -Chaoyang district before deciding to just leave it on the sidewalk. The two-meter-wide stretch of pavement was already blocked with shared bicycles from many bike-sharing companies, leaving little space for pedestrians.

"I know this is not right [to park my bike on the sidewalk]," Hai told the Global Times. "But there is limited parking for bicycles in this area… What else can I do?"

U542P886T1D256967F12DT20170511101345.jpeg

Two Mobike bikes sit parked on Monday in a 1.5-meter-wide space set up by the Zhanlanlu street office in Beijing's Xicheng district. (Photo: Zhang Hongpei/GT)

Most Chinese cities are not bicycle friendly, a Mobike spokesperson said. To accommodate growing motor vehicle traffic, cities have made roads wider, so bike lanes and bicycle parking spaces have shrunk.

"The overall environment needs to change," the Mobike spokesperson told the Global Times on Tuesday.

A part-time Mobike employee surnamed Cao, who works at the East Bawangfen bus station, has seen bike-sharing users break the rules.

"Some users just refuse to listen to me and leave the bikes wherever they please, which makes my job harder," Cao told the Global Times on Monday.

The explosion in the number of bike-sharing start-ups has made things even worse, said Men Changhui, an analyst from Beijing-based CCID Consulting.

Bike-sharing companies have put an estimated 700,000 bicycles onto the streets of Beijing since August 2016, according to a statement on the website of the Beijing Municipality Commission of Transport.

"Supply will exceed demand in the near future, exacerbating the problem of illegal parking," Men told the Global Times on Tuesday.

Scrambling for solutions

Along with boots on the ground, the biggest bike-sharing platforms such as Mobike and Ofo have turned to technology to address the parking problem.

For example, Mobike in April 2017 set up hundreds of smart Mobike Preferred Locations in eight cities including Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou, capital of South China's Guangdong Province. These locations employ Internet of Things technology and built-in sensors that help the company precisely locate its bikes, the company's spokesperson said.

Ofo has joined forces with the satellite navigation company BDStar Navigation to improve its positioning technology, the company's spokesperson told the Global Times on Tuesday.

However, these measures have yet to succeed at keeping cities' roads and sidewalks open to pedestrian and vehicle traffic.

On April 21, the Beijing municipal government issued guidelines for the bike-sharing industry that require companies to take "major responsibility" for their vehicles. The guidelines also encouraged district governments to carve out more parking space for bicycles.

For example, the Zhanlanlu street office in Beijing's Xicheng district launched an initiative on April 23 to coax bike riders to park in designated 1.5-meter-wide spaces on the sidewalk. Through the initiative, the office plans to set up 80 such spots for shared bikes.

Liu Shuhua, who is in charge of public relations at the office, said there has been an improvement in bicycle parking since the initiative's launch.

"It's very important to help people develop good habits for parking their bicycles," she told the Global Times on Monday.

In March, the Shanghai municipal government also rolled out regulations for bike sharing. It required the companies to employ maintenance and operation workers in numbers no smaller than 0.5 percent of the total number of bikes they have put out in the city.

The analyst Men pointed out that bike sharing wouldn't be nearly as convenient if every bicycle ended up in a designated parking area. If that were the case, some users might opt for other forms of transportation.

"The industry would lose much of its advantage," he said.

Local governments could alleviate the problem by assigning traffic police to supervise bicycle parking, but that would add to the cost, experts noted.

In some places, that's already happening. An official from the Majiapu street office in Beijing's Fengtai district said the office has expanded its staff by about one-third to organize shared bicycles on the street, according to a China Central Television report on April 27. The official did not disclose what it would cost to involve the local traffic police.


http://www.ecns.cn/business/2017/05-11/256964.shtml
 
.
Bikes among boosters of BeiDou

By Ma Si | China Daily | Updated: 2017-05-18 06:44


b083fe96fac21a871ad103.jpg

Riders scan ofo bikes in Xi'an, Shaanxi province. [Photo/China Daily]

China's BeiDou Navigation Satellite System will see wider civilian application in the coming two years both at home and abroad, as the domestically developed system is increasingly used in shared bicycles, logistics, precision farming and other industries that demand high-accuracy positioning, a new report said on Wednesday.

The growth of bike-sharing has rapidly boosted the use of BeiDou in the transportation sector, creating a 17 billion yuan ($2.5 billion) market for that type of location-based services by 2020, according to the report, released by the Global Navigation Satellite System and Location-based Services Association of China.

Mobike, a major bike-sharing company, uses smart locks that support both GPS and BeiDou. One of its big rivals, Ofo, said in April that it would use BeiDou-enabled locks.

BeiDou is the world's fourth navigation system based on satellites, among the ranks of the United States' GPS, Russia's GLONASS, and the European Union's Galileo.

In 2016, the output of China's navigation system and satellite location-based market-including sales and other associated economic activity-hit 211.8 billion yuan, up by 22 percent from a year earlier, according to the report.

BeiDou accounted for about 70 percent of the nation's market share of chips, equipment, software, algorithms and other services directly related to satellite navigation in 2016.

China plans to launch six to eight more satellites this year as part of its broad effort to expand the BeiDou network to cover countries involved in the Belt and Road Initiative by the end of 2018.

"As BeiDou expands its overseas reach, it will be increasingly popular in the logistics industry. Ships, for instance, can use it to position themselves while sailing across oceans to European countries, no longer limited to Southeast Asian regions," said Miao Qianjun, secretary-general of navigation services association.

The satellite system is already being used to help track vehicles in Singapore and Indonesia, Miao said.

In 2016, about 510 million satellite-navigation-enabled smartphones were sold in China, with more than 30 percent of them armed with BeiDou's service, reflecting the enormous potential of the market, the report said.

This year "will see a boom in BeiDou's applications in precision farming, drones, mapping, gas and other industries that demand high-accuracy positioning", Miao said.

Farmers can use BeiDou-enabled tractors to plow the soil and drones using BeiDou to sow seeds, which can boost efficiency and better distribute resources.

The report said BeiDou's farming applications have spread from Heilongjiang province to Beijing, Liaoning, Shanxi, Hubei and other provinces across China.

http://europe.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2017-05/18/content_29392255.htm
 
.
Chinese bike-sharing company ofo enters Kazakhstan
Xinhua, June 9, 2017

China's leading bicycle-sharing service ofo announced on Friday it has entered the Kazakhstan market after rounds of negotiations with local authorities.

Kazakhstan is the fourth overseas market for ofo, following Singapore, Britain and the United States.

The company is scheduled to deploy 1,000 bikes to Astana, capital of Kazakhstan, for a trial run, while simultaneously launching the Russian edition of the ofo app.

During trial operations, the bicycle-sharing services will primarily cover the Expo area in Astana.

ofo founder and CEO Dai Wei anticipated that ofo could provide services in about 20 countries and regions, mostly Belt and Road countries such as Kazakhstan.

ofo, whose name is meant to resemble a bicycle, got its start at the Peking University. It now serves in 120 cities and has provided more than 1 billion rides within two years.
 
.
Chinese bike-sharing company ofo enters Kazakhstan
Xinhua, June 9, 2017

China's leading bicycle-sharing service ofo announced on Friday it has entered the Kazakhstan market after rounds of negotiations with local authorities.

Kazakhstan is the fourth overseas market for ofo, following Singapore, Britain and the United States.

The company is scheduled to deploy 1,000 bikes to Astana, capital of Kazakhstan, for a trial run, while simultaneously launching the Russian edition of the ofo app.

During trial operations, the bicycle-sharing services will primarily cover the Expo area in Astana.

ofo founder and CEO Dai Wei anticipated that ofo could provide services in about 20 countries and regions, mostly Belt and Road countries such as Kazakhstan.

ofo, whose name is meant to resemble a bicycle, got its start at the Peking University. It now serves in 120 cities and has provided more than 1 billion rides within two years.

Mobike and ofo, two bike-sharing startups that might go public valued at hundreds of billions of RMB in a few short years. :D:D
 
.
Shareable parking spaces emerge in Chinese cities

By Ai Yan

2017-06-11 22:22 GMT+8

2cdfea9b-c921-427c-bcfe-c424b0a19caf.jpg


A parking lot sharing mobile application is gaining popularity among white-collar workers in Hangzhou, east China's Zhejiang Province, amid China's sharing economy boom.

Searching for parking spaces has long been a headache for many office workers in metropolises across China. Especially for those working in central business districts in first- and second-tier cities, parking near their companies for five days a week could cost them a fortune.

Meanwhile, even with prices for parking lots in residential areas soaring, most of their spaces remain unoccupied during workdays.

9d54580d-504b-472d-80d9-0445442067ad.jpg

Parking lots within a residential area in Nanjing, Jiangsu Province. /VCG Photo‍

There lies the business opportunity for "Searching for Parking Spaces", or in Chinese "Zhao Che Wei", an application developed by a science and technology company. The company, named "Cloud Butler," has upgraded the barrier gates for the residential areas, to enable them to be linked to its database.

By inputting one's cellphone number, license plates number and periods of time needed, an app user will be able to find a shareable parking space in a residential area close to his or her working place.

A man surnamed Zhang is one of the users who have benefited from using the app. He told local newspaper Qianjiang Evening News that it cost him nearly 1,000 yuan (147 US dollars) every month for parking before using the application, but now, after renting one from his parking-lot landlord, the expense has been lowered to 400 yuan (59 US dollars) per month.

"And it is safer to park the car in a residential block than at the roadside," said Zhang.

According to Li Hongbin, CEO of "Zhao Che Wei", the application has over 6,000 registered users at present, and they are planning to work with 200 residential areas in Hangzhou within the year.

d7fb2454-2841-4f64-893f-38aa710be6d2.jpg

A crowded parking lot in Beijing. /VCG Photo

Li said the revenue will be distributed between the application, property management companies and the owners of the parking lots.

Such applications have also emerged in many other cities across the country, such as Beijing, Shanghai and Chengdu. According to Liu Changjiang, head of the Beijing Parking Industry Association, Beijing is also working on a plan to encourage sharing parking spaces.

About 25 to 30 percent of the parking lots in Beijing are left idle, and by sharing parking spaces, the lack of parking lots will be eased and the utilization rate will also be much elevated, said Xie Guangzheng, an official of Beijing Transport Institute.

appmaptile
appmaptile
appmaptile
appmaptile
appmaptile
appmaptile



https://news.cgtn.com/news/3d556a4d3149444e/share_p.html
 
Last edited:
.
Coolqi steps up game in bike-sharing market with new model

2017-06-12 09:43

China Daily Editor: Feng Shuang

Coolqi, a bike-sharing company based in Beijing, unveiled a new shared bicycle model as the company ramps up efforts to compete with rivals such as ofo and Mobike.

The golden bike can automatically adjust its seat to riders' height once users save their height data into the bike-sharing app.

The company also cooperated with Haier Wireless, a subsidiary of Haier, China's major household appliance company, to add wireless charging to the bike, said Gao Weiwei, founder and CEO of Coolqi.

"Chinese consumers spend most of their leisure time on smartphones, whose battery life is always in danger. Wireless charging on the bicycle can help them always get connected to the internet," Gao said.

To differentiate from competitors, Coolqi also developed an intelligent voice locker and can broadcast the weather forecast and other useful information.

The bike-sharing industry is currently booming. The market scale of bike-sharing hit 49 million in 2016, almost double that of 2015, according to a Sootoo Research Institute report.

However the company faced problems like safety of deposit and bikes needing repairs. As for the deposit issue, Coolqi is joining hands with China Minsheng Bank in deposit supervision and management as well as credit extension to guarantee user rights.

In about six months, the company has deployed 1 million bikes in over 50 cities across China. It plans to enter 10 foreign countries including the UK, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Israel and Dubai.:rolleyes:

http://www.ecns.cn/business/2017/06-12/261114.shtml
 
.
The golden bike can automatically adjust its seat to riders' height once users save their height data into the bike-sharing app.

The company also cooperated with Haier Wireless, a subsidiary of Haier, China's major household appliance company, to add wireless charging to the bike, said Gao Weiwei, founder and CEO of Coolqi.

"Chinese consumers spend most of their leisure time on smartphones, whose battery life is always in danger. Wireless charging on the bicycle can help them always get connected to the internet," Gao said.

To differentiate from competitors, Coolqi also developed an intelligent voice locker and can broadcast the weather forecast and other useful information.


Innovations. Those who innovate will survive and become giants in their own way. Like Taiwan's Giant. :enjoy:
 
.
China Focus: From imitation to innovation: China's fashion industry gets tech boost
Source: Xinhua| 2017-06-11 21:07:44|Editor: ZD



BEIJING, June 11 (Xinhua) -- For Chinese fashionistas, a new party dress can be a huge purchase, but the Internet is making it easier to dress sharp without a big price tag or long-term commitment.

Dora's Dream, a women's clothing start-up, runs a subscription-based service that allows style-conscious Chinese to borrow designer clothes with just a small monthly payment.

The clothes-sharing service generated buzz last week at the 2017 Asia Fashion Federation China Conference held in Hangzhou in east China's Zhejiang Province, where fashion designers from Asia gathered to discuss the latest industry trends.

One of those trends, said Chen Dapeng, vice director of China National Textile and Apparel Council, was the integration of the online and fashion industries in China.

"The Internet has enabled consumers to have their own definitions of 'fashion' and allowed them to participate in design," Chen said. "Fashion is becoming more and more personalized."

As Chinese manufacturers try to move up the value chain as part of the country's "Made in China 2025" plan, designers in China are working to reinvent themselves from mere imitators to innovators.

Unlike in France or Italy, China's fashion industry took off around the same time as the development of the Internet, which made it easier for industry insiders to have an "Internet mindset" and computer skills, experts said.

According to Chen, technology will help fashion designers with tailored marketing and flexible production, making personalized customer experiences possible.

Designers in China are also experimenting with a mix of design and lifestyle by opening spaces that offer coffee, books, exhibitions, and clothes.

"Instead of just selling products or services, Chinese fashion companies are now also selling culture," said Zhang Qinghui, president of the China Fashion Association.

According to Zhang, China's strong manufacturing power has laid a solid foundation for the development of the fashion industry, allowing ideas to be executed and products to be sold more efficiently.

"Almost every fashion center in the world has advanced manufacturing capability and support resources," Zhang said.

"While it seems that fashion is a showcase of design capability, it also represents the manufacturing power of a country," he said.

Adding to the optimism for a boom in the industry is China's shift in consumption, as an increasing number of shoppers crave high-quality products with great design.

"The Chinese consumer market is promising, not only because of its volume, but also because local consumers are very reactive, enthusiastic about new things and sensitive to brands and quality," said Andrea Boragno, CEO and chairman of Alcantara, which makes a leather substitute used in fashion and accessories, automotive interiors and consumer electronics.

According to Boragno, Chinese designers have made strides in recent years by shifting from copying to developing their own identities based on creativity and culture.

More than 200 colleges and universities in China now offer design-related majors, preparing fashion aficionados for jobs in the industry.

The industry has also attracted talented designers who have returned from studying and working abroad, including those who have worked for world-renowned luxury brands such as Celine and Burberry.

"As China joins the global 'fashion family,' the industry can take advantage of more resources worldwide," Zhang said.
 
.
Bike-share companies ride into the British high street

2017-06-13 12:25

China Daily Editor: Feng Shuang

U669P886T1D261282F12DT20170613122508.jpg

A cyclist tries bike-sharing company Mobike's new orange bike in Manchester. (Photo/provided to chinadaily.com.cn)

One of China's largest "dockless" bike-sharing companies is following in the tire tracks of some of its Chinese rivals and entering the British market.

Beijing-based Mobike plans to officially launch its service in Greater Manchester. It will be Mobike's first venture into Europe.

Mobike, which operates 5 million bikes in China and is backed by Foxconn and internet giant Tencent, will roll out 1,000 bikes at the end of June for a six-month pilot. After the scheme is up and running, the company will consider future expansion.

Mobike is joining Ofo, which set up shop in Cambridge in April, in competing for market share outside China.

Bike-sharing in China has taken off quickly, especially this year.

Companies including Ofo, Coolqi, and Bluegogo International are competing for customers by offering bikes for rent that have extra features, such as power banks that allow customers to charge their smartphones, and unusual paint jobs, such as a garish gold-colored bike.

Ofo was founded in 2014 and is valued at $1 billion after receiving $450 million in investment during February. It unveiled the Ofo Princess bicycle last week that is aimed at women and has a rattan front basket and an improved chain guard and rounded design aimed at preventing the snagging of clothing. The company claims to have 20 million registered users.

Coolqi's gold color bike, meanwhile, has split opinion among the online community.

"It can't be any uglier," one commenter said.

But the paint job did not bother others, even though the bicycle is, by comparison, pricey. It requires a 298 yuan($44) deposit, while many other rental bikes call for deposits of 99 to 199 yuan. The gold bike costs 3 yuan per hour to rent while most rental bikes can be secured for 2 yuan or less.

"Since it has a smartphone holder, I can navigate while cycling and that's cool," said one commenter who used the online name Sunshine Ziqing."Of course, I will be forever blinking at the dazzling golden color."

There also was concern about the ability of the bike's battery to recharge mobile phones. It is recharged by solar power.

"I just wonder what will happen when it rains and those batteries get wet," said a Weibo user using the online name Energy from Balabala.

In Manchester, Mobike's launch was welcomed by both city councils and by Transport for Greater Manchester.

Andy Burnham, the mayor of Greater Manchester, said he hopes many people will swap their cars for bikes. He vowed to take a positive approach in promoting cycling in the region.

"We're conscious that our city center is a complex and busy area already," Burnham said."Transport for Greater Manchester has been working hard to establish a voluntary code of working with Mobike to make sure the service operates in a way that doesn't inconvenience other road users, pedestrians or city center traders."

Users of the cycle hire scheme will have to download an app that allows riders to unlock an available GPS-enabled bike by scanning a QR code on the bicycle.

After finishing their trip, the cyclist will manually lock the bike and leave it in an authorized parking location. This means users do not need to return them to specific docking stations.

People using the bikes will be charged for every 30 minute slot they have them, but details of the pricing structure for Manchester have not yet been released.

"If successful, it could play an important part of our longterm plans for cycling in the region and for making travel easier and more sustainable," Burnham said.

Hu Weiwei, founder of Mobike, said: "We're very excited to make Manchester and Salford Mobike's first European partners. They have long been a European leader in culture, innovation and technology and were carefully selected as promising and highly-suited Mobike cities."

The company said it will "provide its affordable, environmentally friendly and socially beneficial service to a series of European cities over the next few months".

Mobike and Ofo rental bikes will be available at no cost to the taxpayer, unlike those championed by former London mayor Boris Johnson, the so-called "Boris bikes", that are partially funded by Transport for London.

Mobike launched in April 2016 and has since rolled out schemes in China and Singapore. Greater Manchester is now the 100th city to host the service.

http://www.ecns.cn/business/2017/06-13/261282.shtml
 
.

Latest posts

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom