Culture
        

View

Green light for car sharing and pooling

Updated: 2011-01-26 07:57

By Cheng Yingqi (China Daily)

Twitter Facebook Myspace Yahoo! Linkedin Mixx

Beijinger Wang Yong's efforts to get the authorities to legalize car sharing by strangers have finally hit the mark.

Since 1998, Wang, 37, has offered free rides to more than 10,000 people in the capital. He usually waits at the No 344 bus stop in Huilongguan, Changping district, every morning and gives a lift to people taking the same route as him.

But it is only recently that Beijing's traffic control authorities officially acknowledged the sharing of a private car.

For the first time, the policy released on Dec 23, 2010, mentions measures to "regulate carpool".

Green light for car sharing and pooling

Carpools or sharing has so far not been recognized because it was difficult to tell whether vehicles were offering free rides from unlicensed taxis.

"While my efforts may have played a big role in the (new) policy," Wang says, "it is only a start. We need to list detailed measures to encourage car pooling."

Wang wrote an article on carpooling for the People's Daily, which was published on Oct 1, 2010. In it he said, car sharing could help cut down the number of cars on the road by 10 to 25 percent and offered a viable alternative to such measures as traffic restrictions, taxes or limiting the number of license plates.

Wang sent his article to the mayor's office and received a letter of thanks. He also submitted his proposal thrice to the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) Beijing Committee in 2008, 2009 and 2010.

"I've realized that the simpler the suggestions, the more likely they are to be adopted," he says.

Among his proposals are rewards to encourage carpooling, such as throwing open the bus lane for cars carrying three or more passengers.

"People living in the same community, or working in the same company, can form their own carpool groups," Wang says.

He adds that he will continue to pick up strangers at bus stops, because, "I want to prove that sharing a car with others is not difficult".

China Daily

E-paper

Sindberg leaves lasting legacy

China commemorates Danish hero's courage during Nanjing Massacres.

Crystal Clear
No more tears
Road to the Oscars

European Edition

Specials

NPC & CPPCC sessions

Lawmakers and political advisers gather in Beijing to discuss major issues.

Sentimental journey

Prince William and Kate Middleton returned to the place where they met and fell in love.

Rent your own island

Zhejiang Province charts plans to lease coastal islands for private investments

The green lantern
Adventures of Pierre
Inland interchange