Gas, an alternative for cleaner mobility

Air and noise pollution is a major problem around the EU. The Transport sector accounts for over 1/5 of EU CO2 emissions and 1/3 of total energy use. It relies on oil for 94% of its energy needs. Hence, replacing polluting conventional fuels based on oil by alternative fuels such as gas and electricity is the solution for a cleaner mobility.

Air and atmospheric pollution caused by transport is a major problem

Air quality can be affected by pollutants, either from natural origin or caused by human activities (industry, transport, residential, agriculture). Air pollution takes different forms:

  • Nitrogen Oxyde (NOx)
  • Particulate matter (PM10 and PM2.5)
  • Ozone (O3)
  • Sulphur dioxide (SO2)
  • Volatile organic compounds (VOCs)

It has a negative impact on health and environment, generating important social costs – up to USD 1.6 trillion per year in Europe and EUR 100 billion per year in France according to a report from the French Senate. In Europe, air pollution accounts for 600 000 premature deaths per year (according to the World Health Organisation). In France, air pollution is the third cause of mortality, after tobacco and alcohol, accounting for 48 000 premature deaths each year – 9% of total mortality.

Air and noise pollution in cities is a major problem around the EU. The transport sector accounts for 1/5 of CO2 emissions in the EU, over 30% of CO2 emissions in France, and 1/3 of total energy use in the EU. Furthermore, the decarbonisation of road transport will be a major challenge considering that it represents more than 70% of the energy used by all transport modes. In France, the transport sector accounts for 63% of NOx emissions, 19% of PM 2.5 emissions and 15% of PM10 emissions. Petrol and diesel, the most polluting technologies, are set to be replaced in the long term by alternative fuels, both electricity and gas (natural gas and renewable gas such as biomethane or hydrogen) and the EU has made of the development of cleaner fuels a priority.

Greenhouse gas emissions, by sector

Total Energy demand by type of fuel

The complementarity of fuels is a solution for the development of clean transport

In recent years, various initiatives have been pushed to change the scope of mobility and define it as a service. For example, the concept of MaaS (Mobility as a service), is willing to unify mobility modes, and define mobility as going from a point A to a point B, unifying multimodal ticketing and information tools.

The deployment of alternative fuels, both electricity and gas, especially through renewable gas like biomethane, will pave the way for a greener transport and better air quality in Europe. Rather than in competition, both solutions are complementary. On the one hand gas mobility is easier to implement and more cost-effective in heavier vehicles and vehicle fleets, in terms of infrastructures, engine capacity and vehicle autonomy. On the other hand, electricity is more suitable for light, individual urban vehicles. In other words, each mobility usage has an adapted technology solution. Furthermore, the decarbonisation of heavy duty vehicles should be a priority. Indeed, if their share in road traffic is not very large (7% of road traffic in France), they are much more polluting (30% of GHG emissions in France)

Alternative fuels are not only a solution for the future of transport: they are a credible solution already deployed in various countries and cities across the globe. For example, half of vehicles sold in Norway in 2017 are electrified, whereas gas is used to operate public buses or waste collection trucks in major cities across Europe: 80% of Nantes buses run on gas; 62% in Porto and 47% in Madrid, whereas 90% of waste-collection vehicles operate on gas in Barcelona and 80% in Paris.

Fuel alternatives compared

Gas is a cost-effective and immediately available solution.

GRDF has been promoting gas mobility in France for years, in the framework of the transition to cleaner mobility modes. Over 16 000 gas vehicles are now in use in France, with the goal of a larger development, mainly for heavy duty vehicles and public transportation, waste collection and cleaning vehicles operated by cities, while 22 million vehicles operate on gas in the world. All types of vehicles can run on renewable gas and in some countries, renewable gas is already accounting for more than half of all gas consumed for transport usage.

Bio Champions (Source: European Biogas Association)

Local authorities have pushed the development of gas vehicles to substitute old polluting buses and waste collection trucks powered by diesel and petrol. Development of gas mobility in recent years has permitted to prevent the emission of 15 000 tonnes of greenhouse gases in 2015. For this segment, gas offers an alternative fuel immediately operative, with major benefits regarding air and noise pollution and a reduction of costs and easiness to deploy in fleets.

Natural gas contains less carbon than traditional hydrocarbon fuels and therefore emits much less CO2 as a vehicle fuel: between 25% and 30% less in passenger cars and light commercial vehicles, and 10% to 20% percent less in trucks and buses. The full potential of gas engines has not been deployed yet. Optimised gas engines (using direct injection and higher compression ratios) will become as energy efficient as diesel engines, meaning another 10% to 20% of CO2 savings can be achieved.

Furthermore, with the development of new technologies, gas is set to turn renewable too, decreasing greatly its carbon footprint. Biomethane is refined from biogas produced by the natural breakdown of organic material in waste from agriculture, municipal waste, plants, sewage or food waste. It has the same composition as natural gas and can be injected into the natural gas distribution grid, or used directly by natural gas vehicles. “Power to Gas” is the name given to the production of synthetic natural gas with surplus energy from wind farms or solar panels through a chemical process. It can be used directly by natural gas vehicles or it can be injected into the natural gas grid, and further diminish CO2 emissions significantly.

Vehicles functioning on biomethane offer a carbon footprint 80% lower than petrol vehicles. Taking into account the CO2 emissions of electric power plants, a car running on biomethane will have the same impact on environment as an electric car whose electricity has been produced with wind or hydropower and a lesser impact than a car whose electricity has been produced by a coal power plant. Biomethane enables a 93% reduction in particulate matter compared to diesel, and represents a good example of circular economy, contributing to valorise urban and industrial waste through anaerobic digestion.

Natural gas and biomethane, have been identified by the EU as strategic alternatives to replace oil-derived fuels European policy and will play a major part in both road and maritime transport. Regarding alternative fuels infrastructure, Member States now have to develop a plan (National Policy Framework) to establish a network of refuelling stations for natural gas vehicles in cities, ports and along the Trans-European-Network for Transport.

[author] [author_image timthumb=’on’]https://startupprize.eu/wp-content/uploads/GRDF-1.png[/author_image] [author_info]Established on 31 December 2007, the GRDF natural gas company performs its public service missions on a daily basis, delivering natural gas energy to 10,9 million customers via Europe’s largest distribution network. GRDF is a European natural gas company that designs, builds, operates, maintains and develops this network in more than 9,541 French municipalities, while guaranteeing the safety of people and property, and ensuring the quality of delivery.[/author_info] [/author]

A call for truly open data

Open Data is already a legal obligation for public actors. But a handful of private companies are gathering and retaining access to considerable datasets that should also belong to all of us.

Open Data refers to the information collected, produced or paid for by public bodies which can be freely used, modified, and shared by anyone for any purpose, as the European Data Portal (an initiative developed by the European Commission) defines it. In a series of reports led in the EU28+ (EU28 plus Norway, Switzerland and Liechtenstein) and in several large and smaller European cities, the European Data Portal observes that Open Data maturity is, in fact, well underway. Not only have European countries and cities opened their data to the public (a majority of the EU28+ countries have successfully developed a basic approach to address Open Data), but they have also developed advanced features on their portals, and both the use and impact of data have increased over the past few years.

Opening everyone’s data

But, for now, the responsibility of opening the data only falls on these public actors, and that seems hardly fair, or relevant. Connected and autonomous cars generate 25 Go of data every hour, according to a McKinsey study. This data can feed artificial intelligence algorithms that will help make mobility more efficient, cleaner and safer. But what if Tesla refuses to give access to this information? What if Uber or Google can withdraw sets of mobility-related data, even though they arguably belong to the common good? While public actors are opening their data, we also see an unprecedented concentration of equally crucial information in the hands of a few extremely powerful companies. And this is detrimental to the whole mobility ecosystem.

In fact, one consequence of opening the data is that building an efficient and reliable smart mobility system is no longer the sole responsibility of public authorities and public transportation entities. The presence of a reliable, comprehensive, documented, and insightful set of data feeds has resulted in an ecosystem of third-party ‘apps’,” writes Oliver O’Brien, a urbanist and researcher at University College-London. These apps allow to better navigate the public transportation system and foster multimodality, making it easier to spot the nearest available bike or to assess which route is the fastest. For O’Brien, a key driver of success for these open data ecosystems is that the data provider accepts that while there is a value to the data that they release on a free and open basis, the third-party commercial marketplace is better positioned to realize this value, through innovation and different thinking, allowing the transit authority to focus on their core role of running and managing the transport.

But we cannot expect these apps and services to work with only part of the existing information, at least not in a way that is in the best interest of the end users. The fact that a significant portion of mobility-related data remains closed not only perpetuates the monopoly of the likes of Google, Tesla or Uber, but it also hinders economic development and innovation in the field. It is time to embrace the fact that, whoever produces and gathers it, mobility data is, in fact, a common good. It is time for all the actors of the sector (constructors, digital companies, public and private transportation entities, local authorities) to open access to their data sets. It is time for a European mobility database on which we will build the transportation systems of tomorrow.

Focus on the 148 last eligible startups for EUSP for mobility

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European Startup Prize rewards the most promising and inspiring startups of mobility in Europe. A few days ago, we introduced 77 new entrant startups. On January 8th, the call for applications was closed. Almost 500 startups have applied for the Prize. Today, we have the pleasure to introduce the last 148 eligibles startups for EUSP for mobility!

European Startup Prize co-founded by the European Parliament in partnership with the Boston Consulting Group and Via ID, a mobility startup accelerator in Europe, who manage the selection process and jury duties.

The top 10 selected startups will get unprecedented visibility through an all-expenses paid tour of five European tech capitals to meet potential customers, investors, business accelerators and local partners in 2018.

In addition to this tour, 4 finalists will be selected by the jury to each receive 4 months of dedicated business and legal coaching offered by The Boston Consulting Group and other legal and corporate partners to help these startups expand their operations in other European countries!

Together, we’re building a more sustainable future for Europe. 

On February 22nd we will discover the winners who have been selected by a jury of very high quality.

AddSeat / A mobility product designed for a mobile, unrestricted life / Sweden
Airweb Pass / Providing a full digital ticketing technology for public transport / France
All Electric Parking / Service and technology provider for real estate market / Finland
APP.eBike / The 1st e-bike sharing that makes mobility easier for travellers / France
AUTODRIVE SOLUTIONS / Disruptive positioning systems for vehicular guidance / Spain
Autosafe / Safe for vehicle & driver data to improve the car sustainability / France
AVILOO / A diagnostic system for electric vehicle batteries / Austria
Barcosolar.eu / 100% solar boat quality and comfort in business and in eco zones / Portugal
BaseTracK / Autonomous vehicle platform. No sensors/cameras/AI. Blizzard/highway tested / Cyprus
BEE AND CO / Engineering company dedicated on innovative waste to energy  process / France
BikeSquare / Promoting e-bike tourism and transforms e-bikes in smartbikes / Italy
Black Box for Road Vehicles / The only way yo Know the truth every road accident / Portugal

Blue Valet / Valet-parking solution in airports and train stations / France
Boarding Ring / Making motion sickness belong to the past ! / France
BOHR.TECHNOLOGY / An AI & Quantum Computing powered Traffic Simulation Framework. / Poland
Bouncepoint / DDOS prevention company / Finland
bound4blue / Let’s make it happen sailing towards the future / Spain
Breeze Technologies / Data-driven decision making for better air quality / Germany
Cargonomia / Supporting community bicycle mobility solutions in the urban environment / Hungary
CarVroom / A convenient, simple and free community loan platform and the b / Luxembourg
Chargemap / Helping electric car drivers to charge everywhere. / France
Chronotruck / A digital road freight broker / France
Citeazy En / An aggregator of collaborative and connected mobility services / France
Citygoo / First collaborative platform de instant urban carpooling / France
Clem’ Shared Mobility / An innovative French company specialized in “shared eco-mobility”. / France
Clevericiti Systems / Powerful sensor technology for on-street parking detection and management / Germany
Cocolis / Peer-to-peer delivery network / France
ComparaBUS. / Compare bus / train / carpooling / flight tickets in Europe / France
Convoilib / Providing a car pick-up and delivery service for car maintenance / France
Copartage / The startup which created the app CotaxiGO / France
Coreorient / piggybaggy.com / Sustainable and community integrated sharing economy services / Finland
Courseur / A collaborative delivery service between customers / France

Crossyn Automotive / Smarter mobility, with the driver in control / Netherlands
Cryo_Pur / Equipment provider for the production of liquefied biomethane (Bio-LNG) / France

Demeclic / Participative moving / France
Doctibike / Focused on the ebike battery value chain control / France
dox / Stealth mode / Lebanon
DriveQuant / Services for connected drivers and vehicles / France
E-Wheel / The application prepared for an obstacle-free world .. / Iran
E.WALK / The future of urban transport: fast, sustainable and compact / Switzerland
EBIKELABS Company / Providing the first real electronic brain to your e-bike / France
ecov / Carpooling stations and lines for peri-urban and rural areas / France
eiver / The Driving Assistance App that reward motorists / France
Ellis-Car / A.I-based Road Safety Behavioral solutions to prevent Crashes & Pollution / France
ENSO Tyres / Making clean, range-extending tyres for electric vehicles / United Kingdom
Enway / Working on autonomous municipal services / Germany
Eximap / Intelligent solution for Car as a Service (CaaS) implementations in cloud / Finland
Faciligo / Inventing the travelpooling to connect people to move cheap and easy / France
Felyx / Offering shared electric scooters as a new urban mobility concept. / Netherlands
Fleet Peer-to-Peer / A peer-to-peer car-sharing platform for people and businesses / Ireland
Fleetmarket / Online plattform for sustainable mobility products and services / Germany
ForestCar / p2p airport car sharing for low impact travelers / United Kingdom
Frisbee / Making your trip a unique experience by connecting fellow travelers! / France
Fritrak / Building the biggest startup for transport and delivery / Italy
FuelSave.io / The mobile App for EcoDriving / Portugal
Future Proof Shipping / Delivering infrastructure independent hydrogen tech- for ship-propulsion / Netherlands
Geckomatics / Lean Mobile Mapping / Belgium

Geo4Cast / Mobility services based on a real time geolocation data platform / France
GetMyCar / Peer2Peer Platform that allows individuals to share their cars / Italy
GLOB Driving experience enhancer / Bringing GPS one step forward / France
Gophr / Automates and optimises the management of same-day deliveries / United Kingdom
Gopili / The Intercity Mobility Metasearch Engine / France
GoWith / Socially Connected Mobility / Israel
Greengame / Making sustainable living the norm / United Kingdom

Groupito / Platform to find a carrier for transporting groups of 5 people or more / France
Hawa Dawa / Enabling Clean Mobility Solutions. / Germany
HawKar / An electric car for the disabled / Tunisia
Hey Way / Start up which created an innovative lift system / Austria
home2work / Divide by 9 the GHG footprint of home2work commute via 9passengr ride-share / Luxembourg
HotelFriend / hotels & services, travel deals / Germany
hubtobee / Behave like a bee hive / France
Hubup / Reinvent Public Transport / France
Humanising Autonomy / Natural interactions between autonomous systems and people / United Kingdom
Hyper Poland / Hyper Poland is one of top startups working on the Hyperloop technology / Poland
Ian Motion / Electrical new life for your old vehicle ! / France
INSTANT SYSTEM / Multimodal transportation platform for travelers / France
Jamnet – Vahgo.com / It is a digital platform of TIR-sharing for helping transportation logistic / Italy
jetlite® / Comfort to lighten jetlag / Germany
Konecti / A Decentralized Mobility Organization centered on economical empowerment an / Spain
La folle allure® / Electric moped with neo-vintage look / France
LGM S.A. / Controller technology, increasing generator power output above nominal / Poland
Lowbus / Marketplace to reduce the empty legs in the bus industry. / Spain
Macingo.com / Shipping marketplace where shippers meet carriers with extra space / Italy

Maestra Mobility / A new kind of electric scooter, with three wheels and turnable to trolley / France
Maison Ginger / Reinventing soft mobility solutions and think them like fashion accessories / France
Mask Generation / Designing and selling Masks filtering air pollution in comfort and style. / France
MatchRiderGO / Route based carpooling for high traffic daily commutes / Germany
Mesopo / Mobility analytics for cities powered by artificial intelligence / Denmark
Méthajoule / Development and construction of anaerobic digestion sites: energy, biofuels / France

MiMoto Smart Mobility / First Made In ITALY electric scooter sharing for a B2C&B2B model/ Italy
Mobeelity / First inter modal mobility platform learning from your daily habits. / France
Mobilitasostenibile.it / To be a tool to support mobility, tourism and sustainable development / Italy
MobilityLabel / The Employee Commute Optimizers / Netherlands
Moovin / MaaS startup that integrates existing public and private transport in 1 App / Spain
MotionTag / Developing a platform for seamless pay-as-you-go traveling. / Germany
My Smart Remote / Award winning innovative system to prevent modern car stealing techniques. / United Kingdom
NanoTech Analsysis / An innovative start‐up based in Turin / Italy
Navigato / Robust SaaS platform, mobile apps and #Tangle IoT devices for EV segment / Bulgaria
NetOP IoT Network Operator / Healthy transportation of cold chain process / Netherlands
NRGkick / Charging electric vehicles on standard CEE and Schuko sockets / Austria
NÜWIEL / Making clean and smart mobility solutions for last mile delivery / Germany
ONE PLAN (ex: ITS EUROPE 2020) / An integrated intermodal door-to-door approach to transport / Poland
OpenMotors / The 1st ready-to-use Self Driving EV, modular, open & white-label. / United States
OpenMove / An ecosystem of software solutions to enable MaaS / Italy
Opportumeety / Conectamos a las personas en sus viajes y creamos oportunidades invaluables / Spain

OuiHop’ / Urban and real-time carpool app / France
Parkizi / An application allowing its users to quickly find a parking spot / France
Parquery / Providing real-time data to mobility operators via image analysis / Switzerland
PimPamPost / Small parcels international delivery based on sharing economy / Spain

PinBike / Your bicycle becomes smart and rewards you for what you use it! / Italy
Pink Mobility – Electric Move / Electric scooter for utility and private users / France
POMP / Fuel delivery on demand / France
PowerTower / Effective driving, parking and charging all-in-one mobility solution / Slovakia
Projet-Benur / The benur project develops a bike for people with reduced mobility regardle / France

Quisque / Physical-digital platform to turn urban mobility into a smart and connect / Italy
Rekola / Stationless bikesharing system for medium and large-sized city / Czech Republic
Reparizy / Marketplace, which links independent professional mechanics with car owners / France
Rikxa / Airport- city shuttle convenient  than taxi a Queue cheaper than Uber / Portugal
RossiniEnergy / Innovative energy storage systems using electric vehicles during parking / France
RYDIES / We digitalize & connect short-distance mobility operators, providers, users / Germany
SIGRA Technologies / AI based autonomous driving solutions / Germany
SocialRooms / Plataforma que conecta usuarios que viajan solos para compartir alojamiento / Spain
SOPHIE TROT / Sharing renting service for electric kickscooter / France
Spark Horizon / First free & universal charging network for electric vehicles across Europe / France
SSTRATEGY / Rocket the business  by getting into Subscription Economy / Spain
Steerty USA / B2P platform for automotive (former/internal name Superauto) / Czech Republic
Strataggem / Crowd-sourced agile radio solutions for communication and tracking. / France
Stroma Vision / Vision sensors which track driver behaviour to decrease accidents. / Turkey
Supraways / Solar Urban Personal Rapid Automated Transportation Systems / France

Swiss Custom Watches / Vitruvian Shield – Human & vehicle biometric interface / Switzerland
Tabi.pro / Dynamic Passenger Information System that supports multimodal transport / Poland
TAKENB / Takenb is an application and an plateform / France
TankYou / Delivering the only thing Amazon is not delivering: fuel / France
taptoroad / Online bike sharing platform for tourism densed areas in Turkey. / Turkey
TeleRetail / Urban Logistics Automation with delivery robots / Germany
The Precious / Grow Food+Medicine from Waste thru integrated Urban Indoor Plant Factories / Germany
The Urban Future / Delivering VR design experience solutions for Urban Planning and Traffic / Netherlands
TICKETEX / The first app that allows you to change a ticket date/time by exchanging it / Italy
To-U / EV charging platform connecting environmentally responsible businesses / Poland
Tomorrow / Quantifying the climate change impact of the daily choices we make / Denmark
TRYON branch / Turn wastes into bio-NGV, feed and supervise vehicules fleets. / France
Tunnll / Smart mass transport for any small town, a personal bus for every citizen. / Spain
Uniwheel Personal Mobility / A personal electric mobility company based in London, UK / United Kingdom
UrbanCyclers / Smart Digital Platform for Boosting Cycling / Czech Republic
Vip2Zip / The sharing ecology app / Italy

Virtuo / Seamless car rental company / France
Voltia e-mobility / Switch your commercial vehicle fleet to electric NOW / Slovakia
WayCare / AI-driven mobility solutions for smart cities / Israel
Wegoto / Move freely, anywhere / France
WELLO – VELOCE SAS / A solar powered multi-purpose vehicle safe and connected for all / Reunion
Wheelskeep / Valet parking and services for bicycles. / France
XeeTeam / An open api based platform for connected cars / France
YayFon OÜ / Cloud-based communication platform / Estonia
yourDesk / A website enabling people to lease or rent short-term workspace / Italy

You2you / Connecting shops to individuals to facilitate last-mile deliveries / France
Zephyr & Borée / Sail shipping company / France
ZEPLUG / EV charging operator at home & workplace / France
Zero Emission / For zero-emission vehicles that can charge in 5 mn and have a good autonomy / France
Zify / An Instant & dynamic carpooling app for short & medium distance commute / France
Zoi / Smart bikes & accessories / Hungary
Zoov / Sustainable e-bike sharing / France

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Focus on 77 new applicant startups of mobility

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European Startup Prize rewards the most promising and inspiring startups of mobility in Europe. A few days ago, we introduced 30 new entrant startups. Today, we have the pleasure to introduce 77 new startups of mobility!

European Startup Prize co-founded by the European Parliament in partnership with the Boston Consulting Group and Via ID, a mobility startup accelerator in Europe, who manage the selection process and jury duties.

The top 10 selected startups will get unprecedented visibility through an all-expenses paid tour of five European tech capitals to meet potential customers, investors, business accelerators and local partners in 2018.

In addition to this tour, 4 finalists will be selected by the jury to each receive 4 months of dedicated business and legal coaching offered by The Boston Consulting Group and other legal and corporate partners to help these startups expand their operations in other European countries!

 

Alfred Chofer / Plataforma de servicios de chofer bajo demanda / Spain
Barqo / The P2P and commercial boat rental platform / Netherlands
BeNomad / GPS Navigation and Route Optimization Software for Electric Vehicle / France
BestMile / Platform for the operation and optimization of autonomous mobility services / Switzerland
BetterWorld / AI applied to customer intelligence, to develop better mobility solutions / France
BikerrFrance / Bike sharing between individuals / France
BLINK! ILS / A light & signaling system fully integrated in a range of bicycle saddles / Spain
BLOOWEELS / Premium EV car rental / France
Born Electric / #BornElectric / Poland
Cargonexx / Trucking as a Service – Intelligent Long Haul Transportation Network / Germany
Carla Cargo / What do you want to move? / Germany
Certificare.fr / Certificare provide vehicle data history to fight against fraud on used car / France
CIGO! / Reshaping the future of logistics and tourism management / Spain
Commuty / The application managing your parking to the satisfaction of your employees / Belgium
COSAW International / Developing and patenting the ultimate Automated Self Boarding System / UK
Craft Bicycle / We are a start-up that builds city bicycle  made of sustainable materials / Romania
DISCOPERI / Discoperi Inc. is a startup that launches road accident prevention system / Spain
DORRIS / Emergency Management Communication Solutions / Portugal
DOYOUNO / Helping to find the best Pros in your neighborhood and Videoconsult / France
dwump / Move, dump or recycle household stuff on-demand with local van drivers / Belgium
Easy B free / Implement self-service rental points for electric escooters in building / France
EcoG / Monetization engine and open API layer for EV Charging / Germany
ECTOR / Valet parking for travelers / France
Electric Rent & Advertising / We change the world thrue Electric Mobility / Portugal
ENG Insight / Rethinking mobility to improve the social function using sharing economy / UK
Enway / Enway works on autonomous municipal services / Germany
EP Tender / EP Tender is a modular range extending service for electric vehicles / France
EvoT / The evolution of cycling for more ecological & comfortable trips / United Kingdom
Futuriot / Data analytics company founded by old Nokia and Mirosoft employees. / Finland
Glasschair / Smart Glass Solution for hands-free wheelchair driving / Germany
Groupito / Platform to find a carrier for transporting groups of 5 people or more / France
HAIKU by ASPHALT Lab / Next Generation Bike Assistant with Navigation, Notifications & Statistics / France
HySiLabs / Facilitation of hydrogen transportation with a hydrogen liquid carrier / France
ImagineCargo / Reducing the emissions of logistics / Germany
IPDI / Personal mobility for digital generations’ / UK
ISEM TECHNOLOGIES EUROPE / Sales and Research Centre of ISEM TECHNOLOGIES (Shanghai) / France
K-Ryole / The 1st smart electrical bike trailer that makes you feel it’s always empty / France
Les Tontons / Les Tontons Livreurs : A man with his van, for all your needs ! / France
Libralato / The SMART engine: breaking the car’s addiction to oil, cost competitively. / United Kingdom
Liight App / Encouraging sustainability through gamification and smartcity systems / Spain
MAGMENT / Magnetizable concrete for inductive dynamic wireless charging of EVs / Germany
MOPRIM / Fueling smart mobility / Finland
MVMANT / Public transportation on demand / Germany
NomadicScooter / Nomadic Scooter / Latvia
OpenAirlines / Developping Solutions to help airlines reduce their costs and CO2 emission / France
OTONOHM / Designing, manufacturing and distributing multi-purpose batteries for mobility / France
Padam / SaaS for dynamic on-demand transport services / France
Parkbob / Enabling the ultimate last-mile parking experience / Austria
ParkWise / An Intelligent Parking Platform that solves the street parking problem. / United States
Powertrain / Carbres – Innovative way of communication among car workshops and clients / Czech Republic
RedE Scooter / Electric scooters for professionals / France
Resender / First & Last mile E-commerce total RESENDER chain solution, just 1 click! / Netherlands
ROLLKERS / A disruptive solution to last mile and multimodal transportation problems p / France
Saroléa / The Ultimate 100% Electric Motorcycles – Sustainable – Intelligent – Safe / Belgium
SAS TWOONPARK / Smart and collaborative street parking application / France
Sentier Adventure Gear / Transformative biking gear enabling anyone to carry anything on bikes / Italy
Shuttle Planet / Driven By Sharing / United Kingdom
SI.X / Providing portable solutions to urban commute, services and solutions. / Italy
SoBus.fr / The 1st booking website dedicated to bus in Europe. / France
STRAFE TECHNOLOGIES / Develop personal transport vehicle with weight vectoring chassis technology / Norway
Taxify / Leading taxi and ridesharing platform in Europe and Africa / Estonia
TICKEY / Mobile ticketing app that allows you to pay fares for public transport. / Bulgaria
TOPP Tactical Intelligence / Operational excellence & performance enhancement business solution provider / UK
Tracefy Smart Mobility solutions / Developer and provider of GPS technology for bicycles and fleet-management / Netherlands
TravelCar Paris / Innovating parking and rentals for travelers / France
Twentyforty / Innovation in global mobility, clean energies and consumer products. / Italy
TwinswHeel / TwinswHeel develops droids for last mile delivery / France
Valerann / Making roads smart – roads that are safer, faster, & support CAVs / United Kingdom
Velco / Designing & Selling solutions for smart mobility in smart cities / France
Velocomotion / Digital platform for bike rental throughout Europ / France
Wakeo / A Saas for real-time visibility on B2B shipping flows (road, sea, air) / France
Webreathe / People Flow Intelligence for Smart Transportation & Smart Cities / France
Wemoov / Webapp in the urban micro-mobility / Belgium
Wepark smart parking / Offering a smart solution that solves challenges of parking in cities / Croatia
Wingly / Wingly is a flight sharing platform / France
Xyzmode / Open-source transportation platform / Finland
Zemove – Zero Emissions Movement / Connecting people and places. Get there with Zemove / Italy

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Europe Is Our Playground!

What makes the European ecosystem different to other mobility ecosystems?  What is the secret sauce of the European mobility ecosystem? By Via ID

The mobility landscape is becoming more and more complex. It must be reinvented – and we, as Europeans, have all the legitimacy to do so. Why? Because we have all the ingredients to make Europe the playground for future unicorns of mobility: a strong legacy to capitalize on, a pool of regional skills to empower innovation and startups, and more…

At the beginning were… New mobilities

“New mobility” has moved into everyday language. And for good reasons: we are at a turning point and it is one of the major social challenges of tomorrow. But is this really new? Each great epoch came with its own “new mobility” narrative. Each revolution was provoked by new means of transport: the use of the horse for conquests, migrations, agriculture; the great discoveries made by sailors; the train was the driving force of the first industrial revolution; the thermal car, that of the second industrial revolution…

Today, we have entered the 3rd industrial revolution: that of intelligent, sustainable and connected mobility. With 10 billion inhabitants on earth in 2050, 66% of whom will be urban dwellers, the mobility landscape is changing and becoming more complex.

On the one hand, the constraints weighing on cities will increase: saturation of existing infrastructures, scarcity of available space in cities, environmental pressure, public health problems, budgetary constraints on the development of new infrastructures… On the other hand, the needs for travel are changing: search for immediacy and convenience (transportation on demand, door-to-door), explosion of travel options needs, increased user-consumer demand, disinterest of younger generations for the private car…

We must reinvent our global mobility. And we, as Europeans, have all the legitimacy to do so. Why?

Europe and mobility: a true love story

As the cradle of “new mobility”, Europe has always been the creator of mobility solutions. We have built up a solid expertise on the subject and some of the largest transport companies are from the old continent: Airbus, Transdev, Ratp, Siemens, Volkswagen, Deutch Bahn, Renault…

In addition, we have extraordinary infrastructures and a unique diversity of means of transport per square metre in most of the major European regions: metro, trains, buses, trams, shared bicycle systems, shared cars, shared scooters… Many of them were launched in Europe before being deployed and copied all over the world (TGV, Vélib’, …). We are also driving the widespread adoption of soft mobility.

In Amsterdam, there are three times more bicycles than cars and in Copenhagen, the modal share of bicycles exceed cars by the end of 2016. It is a unique legacy to capitalize on. To go faster and further.  It’s a force we’re envied for. More and more American and Asian mobility start-ups are looking for European investors. Not for their capital but for their “Smart Money”: their expertise and know-how.

Europe: a pool of regional skills to empower innovation and startups

In addition, the diversity of our cultures and sensitivities has allowed us to develop local and recognized skills to empower innovation and startups:

  • Berlin and its high “execution control” with the Rocket internet With more than 100 startups to its credit, the concept of this incubator-investor is to duplicate and fine-tune successful web startup concepts in less than 100 days. Stars such as Zalando, HelloFresh or Foodora are part of the adventure.
  • London and its investment know-how. According to Tech City, the UK attracts about a third of all venture capital money available within Europe. 60 % of tickets delivered in the British ecosystem exceed 20 million euros in 2016 and investment in the UK represents 1.34 billion euros in 146 deals in the 3rd quarter of 2017.
  • Helsinki and its “Mobility as a Service” model. Finland is a pioneer and strongly contributes to promoting the MaaS concept in Europe and around the world. With the Whim app, 10,000 passengers at Helsinki get the transport services that they need (bike, cars, taxi…), travelling doorstep to doorstep, with only one ticket and fare.

A tough market but a springboard for future unicorns

Needs and consumption patterns in the European market are heterogeneous. It is a challenge that requires adapting to each specific market: different regulations, market size, consumer habits, taxation, recruitment, financing, etc.

However, for early-stage European companies these difficulties are also a tremendous opportunity to gain agility, inventiveness, and adaptability. The natural resilience acquired by successfully competing across rich and complex European markets makes it easier to compete abroad more effectively. Additionally, European public and private actors are working every day to accelerate European entrepreneurs:

  • Working towards better integration of the single market.
  • Putting in place policies to encourage soft mobility (London and Milan with their urban tolls; Paris, Barcelona or Copenhagen and the introduction of zero-emission zones in 2030)
  • Encouraging large-scale experiments (as in “Grand Paris”)
  • Breaking silos and develop cooperation between private and public actors / sectors

There is still a long way to go, but we all have the ingredients to make Europe the playground for future unicorns of mobility. Let’s keep going!

 

[author] [author_image timthumb=’on’]https://startupprize.eu/wp-content/uploads/Capture-d’écran-2018-01-05-à-10.45.29.png[/author_image] [author_info]Sophie Bailly is in charge of communication and partnership for Via ID [/author_info] [/author]

[author] [author_image timthumb=’off’]https://startupprize.eu/wp-content/uploads/Logo-VIA-ID1.jpg[/author_image] [author_info]Via ID is a business accelerator and the venture capital arm of Mobivia, the European leader in automotive services and new mobility solutions (Norauto, Midas, A.T.U…). With offices in Europe, USA and Asia, Via ID aspires to take part in the most innovative and new mobility projects globally, focused on intelligent, sustainable and everyday means of mobility. The Via ID teams support some twenty startups in France and abroad (Smoove, Drivy, Heetch, Xee, Swiftly, …). www.via-id.com[/author_info] [/author]

Methodology: How much can a start-up contribute to a low-carbon mobility in the future?

Startups will be judged for their ecological benefit. For the European Startup Prize for mobility, Carbone 4 has set up an exclusive methodology to assess how much a startup is able to contribute to the transition to this new era of low-carbon and environmentally-friendly mobility. Applicants are strongly encouraged to consider this method.

CONTEXT

Climate and demographic challenges force us to rethink mobility.

Alternative fuels such as electrification, natural gas and biomethane, hydrogen, connectivity and intermodality offer exciting opportunities for start-ups using innovative technologies to create a more sustainable mobility.

This prize is aimed at rewarding start-ups promoting new products and services for tomorrow’s mobility. As Europe seeks to make as much as possible our transportation system more environmentally-friendly, it is legitimate that a part of the evaluation of these start-ups deals with environment, in particular the need to decarbonize mobility.

Thus, the methodology described hereafter is designed to assess how much a start-up is able to contribute to the transition to this new era of low-carbon and environmentally-friendly mobility.

MAIN PRINCIPLES

The methodology focuses on several questions: all are related to environmental aspects. Therefore the first question to address is:

  1. Does the start-up’s products or services address the topic of mitigation of GHG emissions and/or local pollution?

If the answer is “Yes”, then several items have to be dealt with:

  1. Magnitude: which quantified benefit is provided by the solution?
  2. Efficiency: how many euros are needed to obtain this benefit?
  3. Diffusion: how fast can the solution be deployed throughout the transportation system?
  4. Permanence: does the benefit brought by the solution sufficiently last over the years?
  5. Public engagement: does the start-up publicly take position on the topics of GHG emissions or local pollution?

Besides, a bonus can be granted to the start-up if its solutions address some other externalities of transportation, such as congestion, noise, etc.

The scoring required by the assessment will appear as a grade between A+ and D-, or as a number of stars (between 0 and 5).

This scoring will of course depend on the answers to the previous questions, with a weighting accounting for the relative importance of each item. The table below summarizes the choices that have been made.

Criterion

Method of scoring Weighting Comment

Magnitude

Quantification of unit benefit x size of the potential market, and position on a scale of magnitude 40% Requested information to be provided by the questionnaires

Efficiency

Calculation of a ratio of € per unit of environmental benefit, and position on a scale of efficiency 20%

Requested information to be provided by the questionnaires

Diffusion Position on a scale of speed of deployment 15%

Carbone 4 expertise (based upon the type of sold product / service)

Permanence

Position on a timescale 15%

Carbone 4 expertise (based upon the type of sold product / service)

Public engagement

Maturity matrix regarding public declarations and participation into active groups or projects 10%

Requested information to be provided by the questionnaires

BONUS

Number of negative externalities addressed by the solution (other than GHG emissions and local pollution) up to one more star

Carbone 4 expertise

 

For each of these criteria, both topics of GHG emissions and local pollution will be dealt with. A 60% weighting will be applied in favour of GHG emissions mitigation.

QUESTIONS for THE START-UPS

In order to feed our methodology and enable the scoring, here are the questions to be asked to the companies:

  1. Can you provide us with all the information quantifying the environmental benefits brought by your product/service to mobility (especially regarding GHG emissions and local pollution)?
  2. What is your business plan in terms of sales, investment and turnover?
  3. Have you taken public positions supporting the need to embrace more seriously the reduction of GHG emissions or the fight against local pollution caused by transports? (provide proofs)
  4. Do you take part in or support active groups or pilot projects aimed at addressing the issues above? (provide proofs)
  5. Would you like to claim any additional environmental or socio-economic benefits for society that your solution may provide?

How to make intermodality happen now

On paper, intermodality is the golden answer to most of our contemporary mobility challenges. Combining car sharing, carpooling, biking, walking and taking the train, the bus or the metro has quite a few perks: it makes mobility more flexible, reduces congestions and is overall more sustainable environmentally, socially and economically. Intermodality allows city-dwellers to choose their own way of moving around and gives them more freedom. Yet a few hurdles still remain in the way of intermodality at European level — hurdles that call for innovation, concertation and collaboration between public authorities, private actors and startups.

Access to information

Between 2007 and 2010, the LINK Project, led by the European Commission’s Transport Research and Innovation Monitoring and Information System (TRIMIS), looked at intermodal passenger travel. At the time, it noted: “The current status in Europe is heterogeneous; to travel across Europe on a single ticket provided with door-to-door information is a splendid vision, but in reality is often very difficult.” Since then, intermodality has widely benefited from the Open Data movement: it is now easier for users to navigate the public transportation system (and the private services that are increasingly plugged into it, such as car or bike-sharing solutions) and to determine which route is the fastest, cheapest and most environmentally-friendly. This solves a challenge identified by the KITE project, led between 2007 and 2009 by TRIMIS as well : “Journeys are often undertaken by car or airplane in cases where reasonable modal alternatives exist (…). Reasons for such modal choices are in many cases the lack of integration of transport modes or the limited abilities of individuals to combine different modes by themselves.” But there is more to intermodality than access to information.

Adapting the infrastructure

Let’s take the example of SNCF, France’s national train service, who is partnering with startups to complement its network and build a true “door-to-door” service for both domestic and international travel. Offering the service is the first step. Then, there’s allowing the user to book and pay everything seamlessly, through the same app or website — let’s note here that it is also crucial that we come up with solutions catered to those who don’t have access to a smartphone or will never be tech savvy enough to handle connected mobility. Finally, there’s adapting the infrastructure to cater to these new mobilities — which, arguably, is the main challenge for intermodality. The Grand Paris project plans for the train stations of Paris and neighbouring cities to become “public squares” where all forms of mobility will converge. They imagine car and bike-sharing docks, lanes for bikes, gyropods and scooters, carpooling pick-up and delivery points, bus stations and autonomous shuttle stops, bike parks, all in one place.

Building a European-level intermodality network will thus require significant investments in infrastructure, that will make commuting and connecting as painless as possible. It also means putting the user at the center of it all: truly effective intermodality cannot be invented from the top down. It has to match the habits and meet the needs of the people who do commute and travel everyday. It is through concertation that intermodality will no only foster new ways of moving around, but also a new relationship to a city that will be more inclusive, social and sustainable. It will also make the European community somehow more concrete, embedded in the way people live and move. Just like the Erasmus programme has allowed students from all over the continent to meet new people and fall in love with new cultures, a Europe-wide intermodality network would strengthen the European project more efficiently than any political manifesto.

Focus on 30 new applicant startups of mobility

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European Startup Prize rewards the most promising and inspiring startups of mobility in Europe. A few days ago, we focused on 30 applicants startups of mobility

Today, we have the pleasure to introduce the next 30 startups! European Startup Prize co-founded by the European Parliament in partnership with the Boston Consulting Group and Via ID, a mobility startup accelerator in Europe, who manage the selection process and jury duties.

The top 10 selected startups will get unprecedented visibility through an all-expenses paid tour of five European tech capitals to meet potential customers, investors, business accelerators and local partners in 2018.

In addition to this tour, 4 finalists will be selected by the jury to each receive 4 months of dedicated business and legal coaching offered by The Boston Consulting Group and other legal and corporate partners to help these startups expand their operations in other European countries! All seed and early stage startups are welcome to apply from all round the Europe.

 

Akoustic Arts /  Dedicated to sound innovation / France

Atsuke / Mobile Ticketing Solutions for Public Transportation & Smart cities / France

Aydrate / Smart hydration for cycling / Israel

Crypta Labs / Quantum Seeded Encryption to Secure Industrial IoT / United Kingdom

D-RAIL / For a safer and more dependable railway / Sweden

DigiMobee / Editing digital solution in SAAS for mobility / France

ElectricVisionaryAircrafts /Compact autonomous and electric aircraft service / France

eTransport / Electric Taxis and VTCs in Gironde / France

Flash Tech Ind / Creating high visibility jackets that turns safety into fashion / France

FlexiModal / Transloading free solutions for Urban Logistics / France

Geoloc Systems / Development and deployment of C-ITS solutions / France

Geovelo / App for bicycle / France

Jawgmaps / Mapping platform giving digital companies the power of custom maps / France

Liftago / Best-rated ride-hailing platform / Czech Republic

Moneytime / App that reinvents the local commerce / France

Motion-S / Augmenting Mobility Data / Luxembourg

Oocar / Car data service to help drive better and save money / France

Parkisseo / Clever car park / France

ParkWise / Intelligent Parking Platform that solves the street parking problem / England

Parkmatch team / Shared & automatic service for private parking spots rental / France

Shipit.fi / Full end-to-end shipping platform / Aland Islands

Tako / Hail a cab in 1 clic in the city or Share it at the Airport / France

TransPod / Hyperloop, aerospace, innovation, transportation, travel, manufacturing / Canada

Wakeo / A Saas for real-time visibility on B2B shipping flows (road, sea, air) /France

xcarga /Logistics Platform for freight transport and removal services / Portugal

 

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The rise of the European Valley

Europe is becoming a serious opponent for Silicon Valley in the race to be the most innovative place in the world.

On December 18th, alongside the Open Innovation Summit was held in Milan a conference called “European Valley” that addressed the Old Continent’s potential to become a world leader of innovation. “With 85.000 innovation based companies and one of the world’s richest talent pool, Europe offers a unique ecosystem (…) attracting more than 8.700 investors,” argued the organisers. And in fact, over the past few years, Europe has become an ever hotter ecosystem for startups and innovation.

Tech is leading the continent’s growth

The figures are eloquent: according to a recent report by Atomico, European start-ups raised 19 billion dollars in 2017. That’s twice as much as what was raised in 2015. The report, which was released on the occasion of Slush, “the world’s leading startup event” that was held on Nov 30–Dec 1 in Helsinki, establishes that tech is now one of the main drivers of the continent’s growth. By 2020, digitisation is expected to generate between 1.6 million and 2.3 million more jobs than it eliminates in the continent’s five main countries (Germany, France, the UK, Italy and Spain). In the field of mobility, Europe is spearheading efforts to improve and widen shared solutions: “In 2015, companies working on shared mobility in Europe generated around €5.1 billion. But the business could increase 20 times and reach €100 billion in 2025,” writes Euractiv in an article detailing initiatives ranging from bike and electric-car sharing to digital tools to electric-automated shuttles.

A pool of talents

Among the reasons for such a success is the talent concentration: there are now twice as many doctoral students in science, technology, engineering and mathematics as in the U.S, and 5.5 million developers in Europe versus 4.4 on the other side of the Atlantic. The growth is not just driven by a few cities – although Paris, London and Berlin are still main hotspots – : hubs like Munich, Zurich and Copenhagen are fast emerging. And now everybody seems to believe in the potential of the European Valley. Luciana Lixandru, a partner at Accel, told Atomico: “I was optimistic about European tech 12 months ago, and feel just as positive (…) today. The ecosystem is constantly evolving, and its momentum is accelerating. You can find world-class levels of ambition, innovation and disruption across the continent.”

A few things are still holding Europe back, though, mainly the fact that contrary to the U.S. or China, tech entrepreneurs don’t have immediate access to a massive market. “In Europe, they still must navigate 28 different consumer markets and regulatory regimes,” writes the World Economic Forum, adding that the efforts of the Europe Commission to create a single digital market are so far resulting in a “jumble of outdated, corporatist, counterproductive industrial policies,” as write Hosuk Lee-Makiyama and Philippe Legrain of the Open Political Economy Network. Making it easier for digital entrepreneurs to innovate for the whole continent will definitely be key to building a truly successful European Valley. And mobility is probably one of the best sandboxes to do that, now that most European countries and cities have opened their data, fostering third-party innovation in the field of mobility. More on that soon…