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Taiwan Will Soon Have More Electric Scooter Battery Swap Stations Than Gas Stations (electrek.co) 29

According to Electrek, the number of Gogoro electric scooter battery swap stations in Taiwan will soon eclipse the country's total number of gas stations. From the report: Gogoro's battery swap stations look something like a bright green and white vending machine. Users of Gogoro's batteries (which include scooters of many different brands thanks to its partnerships), simply roll up to a station and swap out their depleted battery for a freshly charged unit. A subscription service makes it a quick and easy process that takes just a few seconds. At the end of 2021, Gogoro counted a total of 2,215 GoStations nationwide, according to the Taipei Times. The number of gas stations stood barely higher at 2,487. At Gogoro's current rate of expansion, 2022 very well may be the year that the number of GoStations surpasses the number of gas stations.
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Taiwan Will Soon Have More Electric Scooter Battery Swap Stations Than Gas Stations

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  • Taiwan number 1... in battery swaps.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

  • by kenh ( 9056 ) on Wednesday January 12, 2022 @08:34PM (#62168965) Homepage Journal

    This model is very popular in the US for propane tanks, used for applications like gas grills, but I don't think this will work for electric scooters in the US.

    The difference is the average consumer feels a sense of ownership for their new battery they bought with their scooter. If the scooters are sold without a battery, and the buyer instead is forced to either buy a battery outright OR sign up for a battery swap service, this could be popular, because the scooter buyer would not feel like they are giving up their new battery for a used one, and paying for the privilege.

    Then again, I don't imagine electric scooters will ever reach the critical mass here in America to support wide-spread battery swap stations across the country.

    • The US has a problem with solid water falling from the sky that makes scooters useless for most of the country.
    • by Xenx ( 2211586 )
      Maybe it wouldn't work yet, but concepts like this are becoming more normalized in the younger generations. That isn't to say this would definitely work out in the US, only that it has a better chance than you give it.
    • I don't think this will work for electric scooters in the US.

      Gasoline-powered TaoTao 50cc scooters are available in the USA. Aside from being mechanically unreliable as shipped (some of the Chinese parts are extremely poor quality), they're not very popular because they're very slow and dangerous to drive on roads full of gargantuan SUVs, with drivers who may not notice you until you've gone underneath their wheels.

      Electric scooters merely swap out the energy source. They still don't solve the problems of not being able to keep up with traffic, and that there won't

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      New ideas face a catch-22: until the infrastructure to support them to exist they're seen as hopelessly impractical, and until they're perceived as practical people don't want to invest in infrastructure. If you build infrastructure that's sufficiently attractive, people will use it.

      An *extreme* example of this is Oulu Finland, a city where 20% of commuter trips in the summer are taken by bike. The surprising thing about this city is that that figure only drops to 12% in the dead of winter, when hours of

  • by lkcl ( 517947 ) <lkcl@lkcl.net> on Wednesday January 12, 2022 @10:40PM (#62169193) Homepage

    this story only makes sense when you've been to taipei, and seen 200 scooters pull up over a period of only a couple of minutes at the front of a 4-lane-wide crossroads. the cloud of smoke as 200 2-stroke scooters start off is deeply disturbing. scooters are so essential that even in a small town of 8,000 people where i used to live, there were around 8 scooter shops and repair centres (you couldn't call them garages, they were too small)

    by having stations across an entire city where the battery can be swapped out for one that is already charged, there is no "range anxiety", there is no problem about weight, and best of all there is no massive pollution at every junction. but this only makes sense when you realise that the scooter in Taiwan is *the* major means of travel, and that every town and city is set up for them.

  • Great for Taiwan. Electric scooters are great when you have warm climate. However, when you live in Europe or the US they ain't that great. I actually own one and lives in a Scandinavian country. That means that I can comfortable use it three months in a year and with pain perhaps 7 months. The remainder it isn't usable.

Some people manage by the book, even though they don't know who wrote the book or even what book.

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