Thanks for the informed & some witty replies.
My proposal does not stand.
But my objectives remain.
What legislative changes will provide for safer road cyclists.
What will get car COMMUTERS to move to ebikes?
As d8veh has posted twice, making driving unpleasant will push drivers into considering e-bikes or unpowered cycling.
It's important not to lose sight of the alternatives though, since in the UK we will never get to 50% cycling and here's why. The Netherlands has huge advantages in being almost entirely flat and a population who have traditionally cycled continuously for around a century,
But even there they only just reach 70% cycling including a very large proportion e-biking, and that only by getting very tough and restrictive with cars, very soft on cyclists, and spending vast sums on their excellent cycling infrastructure. In the much more hilly UK we are never going to get to that, even with e-bikes, since on hills they are still hard work for many people.
So to start getting people out of cars onto bikes it's best to first concentrate on the flatter areas by concentrating the infrastructure improvements we can afford into there, while making car driving much less pleasant and convenient by restrictions. There's some proven very effective ways of doing that, for example expensive congestion zones and alternate day driving only allowed.
In the geographically challenging areas it's more productive to accept that many will not cycle (remember, 30% of the Dutch even where it's flat with excellent infrastructure) and concentrate on improving public transport reliability, affordability, frequency and comfort, again with tough restrictions on car driving. There can still be some cycling improvement, but it's not worth spending huge sums on little used facilities, we do too much of that already.
And of course there's the part journey alternatives to reduce powered travel, hire bicycles at strategic stands and even walking. Many in London complete their commutes with walking or hire cycling a mile or so, our very large and central parks, often traffic free, making that attractive. So greening strategic walking and cycling routes will encourage that.
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