The ‘Uber Commute’ Is Next Frontier for CEO Kalanick
The ‘Uber Commute’ Is Next Frontier for CEO Kalanick
London Taxis Plan 10,000 Car Protest in June Over Uber
App
Says regulators should encourage individuals to share
rides
Met with European Commission amid UberPool bans in the
region
By Marie Mawad May 23, 2016 — 4:09 AM PDT Updated on May
23, 2016 — 8:18 AM PDT
Amid resistance from European lawmakers, Uber
Technologies Inc. founder Travis Kalanick called on local regulators to promote
the financial incentives car owners could benefit from if they were to pick up
a neighbor and share their ride to work.
"We can turn every car into a shared car -- the next
frontier is the Uber commute," CEO Kalanick said Monday at a conference in
Brussels. "Is there a way that someone could pick up a neighbor on the way
to work? We have the technology for it, but there are also regulatory
frameworks we have to work with. Why can’t these folks get a little more
incentive?"
Kalanick said he met with regulators at the European
Commission earlier in the day to talk about how cities can solve problems like
traffic, parking, and having too many cars on the roads.
"We’re making our case but also learning what it’s
going to take to bring our kind of innovation to many cities here in
Europe," Kalanick said at the conference, organized by think tank Lisbon
Council. "I got my first course in speaking European this morning at the
European Commission."
Thousands of people are car-pooling with UberPool in San
Francisco and 19 cities in China, Kalanick said. "Imagine if the 300,000
Brussels citizens driving into work this morning could pick somebody up and
make a small profit from doing it," Kalanick said. "More people would
carpool, we’d have less congestion, the air would be less polluted, we’d all
live in a better place. The city doesn’t even have to use taxes to make it
happen."
China Drive
In China, Uber is seeking to catch up to local rival Didi
Chuxing, which has launched in hundreds of cities and this month got $1 billion
in backing from Apple Inc.
"China’s an expensive place and it takes a lot of
funds," Kalanick told reporters after the conference about Apple’s
investment. At the same time, "there’s a lot of funding in this
environment because there’s so much progress on the other side."
Uber’s profits can help fund its expansion into new
markets and products, Kalanick said. When asked whether the company needs to go
back to investors to raise more money, Kalanick said “We’ll keep you posted on
that.”
China’s Didi, already backed by Alibaba Group Holding
Ltd. and Tencent Holdings Ltd., is valued about $26 billion after the latest
round of $3 billion, including Apple’s contribution, people familiar have said.
Uber has been valued at $62.5 billion and is the biggest ride-sharing app
globally.
European Stalls
Uber’s initiatives to expand into new services outside
its traditional chauffeured-car business have faced steep regulatory hurdles in
Europe. The company suspended its UberPop business, which lets unlicensed
drivers use their own car to pick up riders for a cheaper fee, in Sweden this
month amid legal challenges. The service had faced a similar fate in France and
the Netherlands earlier.
While Uber has been dragged to court over UberPop, it has
argued the service isn’t illegal and has called on lawmakers to update the
regulatory framework to adapt it to the chauffeured-car industry, which has
expanded vastly beyond taxis.
Meanwhile local rivals including Spain’s Cabify, backed
by Rakuten Inc., and France’s Chauffeur-Prive, backed by La Banque Postale’s
XAnge, are adding to existing pressure by taxis and other local players.
They’re catering to bankers, lawyers and corporate customers to stand out from
Uber.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-05-23/the-uber-commute-is-next-frontier-for-ceo-kalanick
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