€200 aid to help buy an e-bike

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GOVERNMENT STEPS IN WITH GRANT TO GET PEOPLE OUT OF CARS AND CUT POLLUTION Cyclists could get up to €700 off the price of an electric bike as the government has launched a two-year push to


get people out of their cars and cycling more. It is giving a grant of 20% (up to €200) of the cost to e-bike buyers which can be added to the aid already offered by several dozen towns and


cities across France. In some cases this amounts to €500. The move is part of a bid to cut pollution and the bonus is for electric bikes bought between February 16, 2016 and January 31,


2018. It will help cut the cost of e-bikes that can cost from €600 to €5,000 but does not mean buyers will get a €600 e-bike for free. Local council aid is based on a percentage of the


buying price – the Plaine de l’Ain communes in Rhône-Alpes offer €500 up to a maximum of 30% of the price. However, with local budgets under pressure, the government’s move may mean that


councils will decide that there is less need for them to offer extra cash. Electric bikes have been increasingly common in towns and cities across the country as they help take the puff out


of pedalling – jumping from 3,900 bikes sold in 2005 to 100,000 in 2015 (when nearly three million bikes sold in total). Cycling-friendly policies have also helped with many towns installing


cycle lanes and setting up 30kph town-centre zones. This has helped Grenoble to reach 59% of road available to cyclists and the town of Sceaux in Hauts-de-Seine is in top spot, with 94% of


its roads cycle-friendly. A new government website (in French) has been set up by the Agence de Services et de Paiement to process applications for reimbursement for e-bikes bought over the


past year. Although cycle helmets are not compulsory for adults in France, they are now compulsory for under-12s and adults accompanying a helmetless child will face a €135 fine, reduced to


€90 if paid in 15 days.