Flecc, can you point me towards the relevant legislation or case law that supports your "opinion"?
I'm not familiar with prior N.I. law which didn't get updated with the 2003 exemption for pedelecs from being motor vehicles contained in Exemptions sub-section (h) of the Two and Three Wheeled Type Approval regulation 2002/24/EC. That applies elsewhere in the UK, but transport being devolved and there being no sitting N.I. assembly at the crucial time, N.I was left adrift. I've been given to understand that means only motorcycle law is available to classify a motorised two wheeler there.
This is akin to what applied long ago in the UK, where assisted bikes from the 1940s through to 1983 had to be registered, plated and ridden with a full motorcycle licence. The 1983 EAPC regulations corrected that anomaly, but it appears that only applied in the rest of the UK, not N.I.
N.I. is in the EU of course (for the moment), so in EU law pedelecs as machines are permitted by the 2002/24/EC exemption, even though N.I. failed to implement the regulation.
However, usage rules are a matter for member nations, and N.I. has no EAPC usage permission. Rather weirdly though, N.I. has pedelec riding permission for those over 14 years old* in their own 1995 Road Traffic Act, this following our similar UK 1988 Road Traffic Act lower age limit.
*Still have to be registered though and ridden as motorcycles.
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