Beijing to track delivery bikes with chips in a crackdown on dangerous driving behaviour to meet tight deadlines
- Beijing will launch a pilot programme this year to install chips on bikes of delivery riders for Meituan, Ele.me and other courier services
- It marks another move to regulate the delivery industry, which some have complained contributes to reckless driving
Beijing’s transport authority plans to install chips on electric bikes used by couriers and food delivery riders to better track road traffic, marking another move to regulate China’s delivery industry.
A pilot programme will launch this year in the capital city to “actively monitor [traffic] violations”, the government-run newspaper Beijing Daily reported, citing a decision by the Beijing Municipal Commission of Transport.
The authority will amend local rules for non-motor vehicles to “improve the traffic violation reporting system and urge courier and delivery enterprises to establish a traffic violation log”.
Many netizens on Chinese microblogging platform Weibo welcomed Beijing’s move. One user named Biguanchaichai said companies should have installed tracking chips earlier. “When walking on the pavement or crossing the street, I’m most afraid of delivery bikes that suddenly rush in front of me,” she commented.