China gets back on the bike
Bike ownership in China is on the decline while car ownership continues to rise. How will China shift gears and move back to pedal power?

Addressing the secure bike parking shortage is just one of the ways local governments plan to make bike transportation more attractive to residents | Photo by Jess Scully
According to People and Planet, “From 1995 to 2005, China’s bike fleet declined by 35 percent, from 670 million to 435 million, while private car ownership more than doubled, from 4.2 million to 8.9 million.”
The increasing number of cars on China’s roads – Beijing alone is currently home to some 4 million cars — has meant that many of bike lanes stretching through the capitals have been sacrificed to make space for cars.
Responding to this trend, local governments will begin implementing new measures aimed at encouraging commuters to reconsider pedal power. According to China.org, “The city [Beijing] will restore bicycle lanes which were cut to make more room for cars and buses. It will also work to relieve a shortage of secure bicycle parking”. They will also make moves to rework and remove current regulations deterring bike usage.
Shanghai city authorities have also announced plans to develop citywide bike lanes.
While not exclusively linked to — but certainly impacted by — the increased number of cars on the roads, some readings, including those taken from the US embassy’s air pollution monitor station in downtown Beijing, show that air quality continues to deteriorate.
It is hoped that China will eventually return to being the ‘kingdom of bicycles’, as it was called in days where more than 500 million bicycles were used as a primary form of transportation, and recognise that sometimes progress means moving back to simpler methods.
Do you use a bike as your primary means of transportation, or to access public transport in your city? Tell us about some of the benefits — and challenges — of using pedal power in your city. What do city planners, governments, businesses and residents need to do to encourage a return to a bike-powered culture?



you highlight the issue of migrating from bichcles to motorised vehicles, namely cars. Possibly, its more of new images associated with wealth and social status (affordability in current China’s current globalised economy?). Is it reversable? With a lot of difficulties, I would imagine!
How does Holland and to a certain extent UK (Oxford/Cambridge) managed to balance between needs and desire while maintaining certai level of environmental or even cultural balance.
Infrastructure/environment encourage the transformation!
I’m a dutch living in the city of Kunming, south-west China, since half a year now.
I think Dr. Mustaza is right when he says driving a car is more and more associated with wealth and social status. I see more and more people driving large 4-wheel drive vehicles being based in the city, where there doesn’t seem any necessity for such a large and powerful car. From what I hear, driving bicycles now being a Chinese is looked down upon by city people.
I myself get around on a mountain bike and electric scooter in the city, as I cover fairly large distances. Here in town, once the subway system is built, there might be a chance the growth in cars might slow down, but getting people back on bicycles needs a great change in image.
In Holland we had a few ministers who’d make a statement by riding a bicycle to work, but here it seems those are the ones driving the biggest cars. Perhaps, as life becomes more fast-paced and cities growing to sizes unheard of in most of Europe, going around on a bicycle also simply becomes too cumbersome, besides it loosing its status.
I’ll be interested in hearing other people’s ideas!
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