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9 Jul 2025

A recent BBC Breakfast segment has sparked backlash from the cycling community over its portrayal of e-bikes, with critics accusing the broadcaster of conflating legal e-bikes with illegal,...

8 Jul 2025

More than 30 locations across Scotland have seen a major rise in the number of people cycling, according to newly released data.

7 Jul 2025

Sixteen illegally upgraded e-bikes capable of speeds up to 40mph have been seized and disposed of in a joint enforcement operation in Birmingham city centre.

7 Jul 2025

Bristol-based Cytech training provider and ACT member Life Cycle has launched its award-winning Bikes Beyond Bars programme at HMP Bullingdon, expanding a project that has already impacted lives...

4 Jul 2025

New data from Strava reveals a major surge in cycling across the UK, with Gen Z and Millennials leading the charge.

3 Jul 2025

Shimano has launched an urgent investigation into what it describes as a “critical” shortage of skilled bike mechanics across Europe, warning that the situation threatens to...

2 Jul 2025

MPs have called on Amazon and eBay to tighten controls after e-bikes and chargers flagged as serious fire risks were found for sale on their platforms.

25 Jun 2025

The E-Bike Positive campaign has seen major success in the first half of 2025, with its message reaching nearly 8 million people across the UK through high-profile media coverage and growing...

20 Jun 2025

The House of Commons Business and Trade Committee has asked the ACT, and its parent company Bira, to help them reach out to small business retailers across the country, for their quick input on...

20 Jun 2025

Activate Cycle Academy has reopened its Cytech training facility in Darlington, offering a full range of courses from Home Mechanic up to Cytech Technical Three.
 

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Italian town incentivises cyclists with cash

Posted on in Cycles News

Massarosa, Italy, has become the latest town to introduce a pilot scheme paying people to get on their bikes. 

According to a regional news website, the council in Massarosa, just north of Pisa, says the pilot scheme will see cyclists paid 25 cents per kilometre travelled, up to a monthly cap of 50 euros (£35). This could equate to up to 600 euros (£424) in a year.

Fifty workers will be included in the 12-month pilot, which uses an app to record the distance travelled each day.

Whilst this is the first scheme of its kind in Italy, a similar scheme was introduced in France in 2014 to try and reduce car use, with mixed results.

The six-month trial found that paying people to cycle to work did encourage more people on to 2 wheels. However, while 19% of the new riders switched from driving, most of those had been part of carpools, leaving the true shift away from cars closer to 5%.

Could a scheme which rewards cyclists ever encourage more people to change their habits permanently? Or are the barriers people already have to cycling be too big to be overcome by a small financial gain?

 

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