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The Big Issue to launch electric bike scheme in Bristol

The initiative is seeking to encourage active transport and tackle unemployment

Big Issue co-founder John Bird with one of the branded electric bikes that will be available to hire in Bristol.(Image: PA)

A new pilot e-bike hire scheme is set to be launched in Bristol to encourage sustainable travel and tackle unemployment.

Magazine and social enterprise The Big Issue has partnered with Norwegian bike company ShareBike for the initiative.

After what The Big Issue called “frustrating” manufacturer and supply chain delays, 420 branded power-assisted bikes could be available to ride in the city’s streets in the coming days. A release date announcement is “close”, according to the scheme’s Facebook page.

The trial in Bristol is part of a planned wider rollout of the bikes across the West of England and then into other cities across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

The bikes, like the e-scooters operated by Swedish firm Voi that have already been trialled in Bristol and the West Country for more than a year, will be accessible through an app and payment system, and there will be no docking stations.

The Big Issue said there were also plans to hire 10 workers to run repairs and manage the programme, with the first two employees having now joined. It added that access to services and support would also be offered to improve lives affected by the economic impact of the Covid-19 pandemic.

The Big Issue and ShareBike first announced plans for the scheme in November 2020. At the time The Big Issue's co-founder Lord Bird said: “It’s been wonderful to come together with a like-minded organisation with a truly innovative venture that offers hope to those facing great adversity due to Covid-related poverty.

“We are confident that The Big Issue eBikes scheme will recruit and retrain unemployed and vulnerable people in local communities and provide them with access to support and services to improve their lives."