This is a trade facing website. Visit the ACT's consumer site thecyclingexperts.co.uk for information and advice on cycling and find your local independent cycle retailer.

Search News

Results: 1-10 of 850


26 Feb 2026

Here's one that often surprises people: professional indemnity insurance. It's not just for lawyers and accountants. Joanna Evans, Head of Bikmo for Business, explains in the next installment of...

25 Feb 2026

The Rediscovery Centre has officially announced the launch of the Cytech Technical Three and Technical e-bike Courses at their training centre in Dublin.

19 Feb 2026

Cycling Industry News (CIN) is once again asking independent bike dealers and workshops to take part in its annual Market Data Survey to help build an...

19 Feb 2026

iceBike* 2026 reported record registrations and attendance growth for the second consecutive year at events held at the National Cycling Centre in Manchester and the Lee Valley VeloPark in...

19 Feb 2026

Local Bike Shop Week is approaching, with this year’s celebrations taking place from Sunday 3 May to Saturday 9 May 2026 - and retailers have highlighted the positive experiences they've...

17 Feb 2026

A week to celebrate and highlight the expertise and passion of independent bike shops across the UK is set to be held this May.

16 Feb 2026

A 18-strong coalition of business organisations and tax experts, including the ACT and led-by its parent company Bira, has today written to the Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury calling for a...

10 Feb 2026

The global Cytech training network says it’s strengthening its reach with the opening of its first-ever training facility in Wales. 

4 Feb 2026

Cycling campaigners have criticised the BBC for publishing a “one-sided” report on e-bike pavement parking that blamed riders while overlooking other pedestrian hazards.

4 Feb 2026

British Transport Police (BTP) have abandoned a controversial policy that meant officers would not investigate bicycle thefts if a bike had been left outside a railway station for more than two...

Back to news menu

Brompton boss calls for stronger e-bike battery regulations in the UK

Posted on in Business News , Cycles News

The managing director of Brompton has backed a campaign to introduce stricter e-bike battery regulations in the UK, amid "too many examples of e-bikes, e-scooters and light electric vehicles hurting people and scaring people".

e-bike battery

E-bike batteries have been linked to multiple fatal fires in recent years - as many as 11 in the last 12 months alone, according to The Telegraph - and Will Butler-Adams fears that the incidents are being driven by poor regulations, which are allowing “poor quality” e-bike batteries to enter the UK.

“We’ve got poor quality stuff coming into the UK and if we’re not careful, that will affect the whole momentum of light electric vehicle transport, which would be an absolute chronic shame,” Butler-Adams said in an interview with The Telegraph.

“We trust that an electric car is well made, the standards are well adhered to. And we did have some fires in the very early days of electric cars, but they’ve gone because the standards, the controls, the regulations are such that now we trust them.

“There are too many examples of e-bikes, e-scooters and light electric vehicles hurting people and scaring people. Then suddenly you can’t carry them on public transport, you can’t store them in buildings, and it all snowballs into a world of fear.”

Within the current regulations, e-bike batteries don’t have to be externally tested, and it is up to the manufacturer to certify whether a battery meets the required safety standards or not. Electrical Safety First, a charity based in the UK, is currently campaigning for a change to these regulations that would ensure that every e-bike battery has to be independently tested before it can be put on sale.

Butler-Adams has backed the campaign, along with a bill - set to be tabled by Labour MP Yvonne Fovargue this spring - that calls for a clampdown on lithium-ion batteries, which has also been spurred on by Electrical Safety First.

“The support for our bill by Brompton Bicycle demonstrates how reputable manufacturers want to protect shoppers and their industry from the bad operators in this space who may be producing substandard batteries,” Electrical Safety First chief executive, Lesley Rudd, said to The Telegraph.

“Our bill will better protect the public, protect good businesses and weed out bad operators producing dangerous batteries that put people’s lives at risk.”

E-bike laws are currently in the spotlight in the UK, where the government is considering a proposal that could see the definition of an electric bike altered. If passed, the legal maximum power output for e-bikes would catapult from 250W to 500W, while throttle-powered bikes would gain e-bike status. The latter were previously legally classified as mopeds, making them subject to additional road laws.

The proposed changes, which are in the last two weeks of the consultation period, have drawn plenty of scrutiny, including from the Association of Cycle Traders and Bicycle Association who have both urged the bike industry to unite against the proposed changes

Back to news menu

Useful links

If you have any other queries please contact us.