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A man picks up a Lime electric scooter outside South Kensington Station in London.
A man picks up a Lime electric scooter outside South Kensington Station in London. Photograph: Hollie Adams/Getty Images
A man picks up a Lime electric scooter outside South Kensington Station in London. Photograph: Hollie Adams/Getty Images

E-scooter firms to develop universal warning sound after collisions

This article is more than 2 years old

Licensed operators Dott, Lime and Tier are working with UK engineers amid concerns from charities for blind people

E-scooters could all be given the same distinctive artificial sound to warn people when they are approaching, after engineers and rival operators announced a joint research project to identify the best noise for them to make.

Acoustic researchers will work with firms licensed to run UK e-scooter rental schemes with the aim of developing a universal sound for the otherwise near-silent vehicles. The sound would help alert other road users, particularly people with sight loss.

Concerns have been raised by charities for blind people about the safety of e-scooters after a number of collisions, although these have largely involved unlicensed e-scooters, which are illegal to drive on public roads, let alone pavements.

The sound will be developed at University College London’s laboratories with input from the three licensed operators in London: Dott, Lime and Tier. The multinational operators want to give all their e-scooters the same sound, and hope to set an industry standard for the UK and around the world.

Researchers are aiming for the new sound to be sufficiently distinctive and audible to alert those with sight loss, while not creating further difficulty for those with hearing loss and neurodiverse conditions. A spokesperson said a range of noises would be “ethically tested” at UCL’s Person-Environment-Activity Research Laboratory.

Prof Nick Tyler, the director of the facility, said: “Through studying how the human hearing system has evolved, we can create sounds for e-scooters that are detectable without adding more noise to the environment. It is a huge scientific challenge, but one that will enable everyone to feel comfortable with this new form of micromobility that is quickly growing in popularity.”

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Fred Jones, a regional general manager with the e-scooter operator Tier, said developing “an inclusive sound for e-scooters will be crucial to protecting pedestrians and road users potentially made vulnerable through the introduction of this new transport mode”.

The project will build on work done by operators with disability charities and other acoustic researchers.

The chair of Transport for London’s independent disability advisory group, Joanna Wootten, said they were excited that the venture would be “breaking new ground where there are currently no standards or regulations in place”.

Dr Antonio Torija Martinez, an acoustic researcher at the University of Salford, said they had developed a standalone system with variable noises reflecting speed, but were continuing to look into “developing warning sounds for an optimal balance between noticeability and annoyance”.

Trials of legal rental e-scooter schemes continue across the UK, with the government still giving no indication of its long-term decision over the vehicle’s future. Sales of unregulated e-scooters have led to increasing numbers of crashes and deaths, according to a report from the Parliamentary Advisory Council for Transport Safety.

More on this story

More on this story

  • UK e-bike users warned not to use incompatible chargers after fatal fire

  • Rented e-scooters cleared from Paris streets on eve of ban

  • Melbourne e-scooters will ‘shout’ at riders in no-go areas, deputy mayor says

  • Scooter driver dies after collision with ambulance in Barnsley

  • UK electrical safety charity calls for e-bike batteries to be regulated

  • Four more people just died in an e-bike fire. If nothing changes, they won’t be the last

  • Parisians vote to ban rental e-scooters from French capital by huge margin

  • E-scooters: a tale of two cities as London and Paris plot different paths

  • Lime criticised for offering free rides before Paris e-scooter referendum

  • Parisians to vote on banning e-scooters

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