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NYC begins $2M uncertified e-bike trade-in program

A new effort to reduce li-ion fires will provide UL-certified e-bikes and batteries to delivery workers

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A storage unit containing at least one hundred E-Bikes at a Stop & Stor Self Storage Facility caught fire and sparked a three alarm blaze at 534 63rd Street in Brooklyn on Sunday October 22, 2023. 1258.

Theodore Parisienne for New York Daily News

By Evan Simko-Bednarski
New York Daily News

NEW YORK — Food delivery workers will be able to trade in sketchy, uncertified e-bikes and illegal mopeds for safer equipment by the end of the year, city officials are expected to announce Monday.

The $2 million trade-in program will provide workers with a new e-bike and two new batteries certified by Underwriters Laboratories in return for their old ride, city transportation officials told the Daily News.

“E-bikes are critical tools used by tens of thousands of delivery workers to support our economy,” Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez said in a statement.

“By providing these workers with reliable, safe equipment, we are helping protect this workforce, their neighbors and loved ones, and all New Yorkers who rely on them each day,” he added.

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The program will be open to any New Yorker 18 or older who has earned at least $1,500 in the past year delivering food.

Any non-UL certified e-bike will be eligible for trade-in, and bikes must be traded in along with their batteries, according to the Department of Transportation.

Similarly, any gas or electric moped that lacks a vehicle identification number — and therefore can’t be registered at the DMV for legal street use — will be eligible for trade-in.

Applications are expected to open by year’s end, after a public hearing set for August. Trade-ins are expected to take place next year.

Transportation officials said the program aims to reduce the fire risk associated with some shoddily-made lithium-ion batteries, like those sold as cheap replacements for various e-bikes.

The batteries sparked more than 268 fires in New York City last year, killing 18 people.

Lithium-ion battery fires are “self-oxidizing,” meaning they can burn even if deprived of oxygen, making it hard to fight the flames.


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The Adams administration’s expected announcement comes on the heels of state legislation aimed at getting uncertified lithium-ion batteries off the market altogether.

Gov. Hochul signed a bevy of bills earlier this month outlawing the sale of shoddy batteries — as well as educating consumers on proper battery charging techniques and firefighters on how to extinguish stubborn lithium-ion blazes.

Monday’s expected announcement also hopes to use the program to get illegal, unregistered mopeds off city streets.

Despite the term being thrown around to describe most any battery-powered two-wheeler, e-bikes, by law, are pedal-powered vehicles with an electric motor assist.

Powered two-wheelers without pedals — mopeds — are akin to motorcycles under the law, and must be registered and have a license plate from the DMV.

That requires a vehicle identification number, which some mopeds don’t have — making them illegal for street use in the state.

Delivery workers with such mopeds will also be eligible for a new, certified e-bike under the city’s program.

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