Rocksolid Light

Welcome to novaBBS (click a section below)

mail  files  register  newsreader  groups  login

Message-ID:  

Opportunities are usually disguised as hard work, so most people don't recognize them.


aus+uk / uk.rec.cycling / Re: Active Travel: running into the buffers?

SubjectAuthor
* Active Travel: running into the buffers?Spike
`* Re: Active Travel: running into the buffers?JNugent
 `- Re: Active Travel: running into the buffers?Spike

1
Active Travel: running into the buffers?

<kqp6q9F3bcfU1@mid.individual.net>

  copy mid

https://www.novabbs.com/aus+uk/article-flat.php?id=32645&group=uk.rec.cycling#32645

  copy link   Newsgroups: uk.rec.cycling
Path: i2pn2.org!i2pn.org!usenet.goja.nl.eu.org!3.eu.feeder.erje.net!feeder.erje.net!news-2.dfn.de!news.dfn.de!fu-berlin.de!uni-berlin.de!individual.net!not-for-mail
From: aero.sp...@btinternet.invalid (Spike)
Newsgroups: uk.rec.cycling
Subject: Active Travel: running into the buffers?
Date: 5 Nov 2023 09:50:01 GMT
Lines: 220
Message-ID: <kqp6q9F3bcfU1@mid.individual.net>
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
X-Trace: individual.net hrpG7cHYkBLu/IfZLhoItwCXm6GIrnGXIAffUZ3e/AzT1CCxSv
Cancel-Lock: sha1:sCNkvw31iUBFD4GiLtwPsDpx/dI= sha1:12by2sHrQ514usUOhlXiHalP+5o= sha256:Aq5UKkrh6jIGj0KGp/3O1tazF+nv1HDwEUCiiF8DnTU=
User-Agent: NewsTap/5.5 (iPhone/iPod Touch)
 by: Spike - Sun, 5 Nov 2023 09:50 UTC

=====
TL;DR

Wiggle Chain Reaction Cycles - In administration

Islabikes - ceased manufacture

Three major UK distributors - gone bust

Signa Sports United - announced redundancies

Bianchi - announced redundancies

Bicycle sales - dipped

UK bike shops - record stocks

Active travel - “disappointingly slow progress”

=====

Brexit, lack of cash, politics: has the UK cycling revolution run out of
road?

Bike sales boomed during the pandemic, but now cycle shops are going bust,
sales of ebikes are sluggish and there’s a downturn in ‘active travel’

James Tapper
Sat 4 Nov 2023 17.00 GMT

When Alice Clews-Smith and her partner, Kitty, moved to London, they didn’t
see many options for pursuing their shared passion for cycling.

“I think it’s fair to say that the industry and the cycling scene were very
male dominated,” she said. “There was a lack of space for women,
trans-femme, non-binary people. We wanted a space where these people could
feel welcomed and included. And because not everything is about going fast
in Lycra.”

So was born the Steezy Collective, which brings together cyclists across
the UK. Not that going fast is off the table. The collective noticed that
there were no women in the Fastest Known Times list for the Lakeland 200
route – 200km of mountain bike trails through the Lake District – so they
set about correcting that, and now the list includes nine women riders,
with their efforts captured on film.

The existence of the Steezy Collective and others such as Sisters in the
Wild, the Lakes Gravel Gang, the New Forest Off Road Club and 6am Cycling
is part of a new wave of enthusiasts fuelled by the lockdown bicycle boom.
Riders are now much more diverse than the cliched and not entirely accurate
stereotype of middle-aged men in Lycra.

With miles of cycle paths opening up in cities across the UK, people
reacted during the pandemic lockdowns by buying bikes in record numbers,
with latecomers facing months-long waits. By March 2021, cycle traffic in
England was 64% higher than in December 2013.

Now that has all changed. Last week, Wiggle Chain Reaction Cycles, one of
the UK’s largest online cycle retailers, went into administration while
Islabikes, which transformed the design of children’s bikes to make them
lighter and easier to handle, said that it would stop manufacturing. The
announcements came after three major UK distributors went bust, along with
German company Signa Sports United, and the Italian firm Bianchi announced
redundancies, Cycling Weekly reported.

The whole industry generates about £7.5bn of added value to the UK economy
and employs about 64,000 people
Phillip Darnton, Bicycle Association

So what went wrong?

“We could see it before anyone else,” said Martin Shepherd at Reynolds
Technology in Birmingham, which for the past 125 years has made steel tubes
used to create bicycle frames.

“During the pandemic, you couldn’t ship bikes fast enough,” he said.
“Everybody’s lead time for orders [mostly to Taiwanese factories] started
to go up nine months in advance, 12 months in advance.

“Now we’ve come out of the other side of it, there’s just vast amounts of
inventory because all those people who were having to order 500 bikes 18
months in advance were suddenly swamped with stock.”

Customers, on the other hand, had been hit hard in their bank accounts.
Sales have dipped, leaving companies with stock that’s proving hard to
shift – something analyst Velco described as an economic “whiplash effect”,
where small changes are magnified down the supply chain. Some bikes can now
be bought at steep discounts since 2024 models will be arriving in a matter
of weeks.

Shepherd said high interest rates, as well as post-Brexit trade barriers,
were also playing their part. UK firms have specialised in mid- and
high-end bikes, and sales to Europe had been substantial, but they have
been hit by customs delays and extra charges. Now is an excellent time to
buy a bike, but those bargains come with a price tag for the sector. If the
market is flooded with more cheap stock, it could drive more firms out of
business.

UK bikes shops have record stocks just at the point when potential
customers are facing a cost of living crunch. Photograph: David
Pearson/Alamy
“In the long term, it could result in less choice for consumers because the
more high street shops that shut, the less people there are to fix a
bicycle or advise them,” said Jonathan Harrison, director of the
Association of Cycle Traders, which represents retailers and repairers.

There have already been “quite a lot” of closures, he said, and there are
now about 2,700 bike shops in the UK and another 1,100 workshops, hire
centres and bike cafes.

“The likes of Wiggle closing will have impacts on other businesses, too,
because a lot of distributors have been over-reliant on them as a sales
channel,” Harrison said. “So we will see further repercussions happen,
particularly in the supply chain. But I think the market will bounce back.
We still think there is room for growth in the number of people cycling.”

There is another headwind for cyclists blowing from Westminster. Inspired
by a narrow victory in the Uxbridge byelection in July, Rishi Sunak
declared the end of an alleged “war on drivers”.

Whether that amounts, as some fear, to a declaration of a new war on
pedestrians and cyclists remains to be seen – the prime minister’s plan for
drivers includes a clampdown on 20mph speed limits, bus lanes and
low-traffic neighbourhoods (LTNs), having slashed funds for cycle lanes and
pavements in March.

There used to be cross-party consensus on active travel, but there’s been a
substantial change over the last 18 months against anything perceived to be
green. Duncan Dollimore, Cycling UK

Last Friday, the Commons’ public accounts committee said there had been
“disappointingly slow” progress on increasing active travel. The Department
for Transport has been ordered to conduct an LTN review and has canvassed
views from local authorities, which campaigners say could lead to reopening
rat runs closed years ago by tarmacking over cul-de-sacs and ripping out
bollards and other so-called modal filters.

“During Covid we saw a massive increase in levels of cycling,” said Duncan
Dollimore, head of campaigns at Cycling UK. “Since then, the numbers have
dropped substantially and we’ve lost all the benefits. And part of the
reason is government policy.

“There used to be a cross-party consensus on active travel, but there’s
been a very substantial change in tone over the last 18 months. The whole
narrative from the government has been very much against anything that’s
perceived to be green, and it’s quite toxic.”

He said that a media campaign with “a certain degree of vilification of
people cycling has an effect on people and then puts people off. The
narrative against cycling isn’t helping these local industries.”

Phillip Darnton, the chair of the Bicycle Association, which represents
larger manufacturers and retailers, said they have been trying to persuade
ministers that the cycling industry presents an opportunity to boost
economic growth.

“The whole industry is surprisingly valuable,” he said. “It’s probably
generating about £7.5bn of added value to the UK economy and, if you
include livelihoods, employs about 64,000 people.”

Islabikes, which transformed children’s bikes to make them lighter and
easier to handle, recently said it would cease manufacturing. Photograph:
James Sturcke/Alamy

While it is often tempting to look enviously at the Netherlands and
Denmark, which have been investing in cycling and cycle lanes since the
1973 oil crisis, Darnton pointed to Germany as inspiration. “In Germany
last year they sold about 2.2m electric bikes and were disappointed they
couldn’t satisfy the last 100,000 orders,” he said. “In the UK, we
struggled to sell 150,000.”

France has had huge growth in ebike sales, he added, because the government
had offered some modest subsidies. “The French say it’s not about how many
euros or pounds but the very fact that the government says: ‘This is the
strategy – we want to urge you not to use a car for short urban trips’ and
makes it attractive for businesses to make deliveries in the last mile by
cargo bike.”

Cargo bikes – larger, usually electric, bikes with a separate carrier – are
one remaining bright spot, with people adopting them in growing numbers.

The trend is particularly noticeable in Cambridge, where it was
instrumental in shielding Outspoken Cycles, which sells and services bikes
in the city, from the worst of the lockdown effects, according to the
shop’s general manager, Robert Hampton.

“We haven’t had the overstock issue for cargo bikes,” he said. “We’re now
back to a lead time of about four weeks. It’s been steady growth: 20% more
this year than last year, and 20% more last year than the year before. It’s
much more of a steady increase of people looking more to move out of using
a car for everyday journeys.”

Meanwhile, there are still plenty of riders who take the sport seriously,
whether that’s taking one of the dozens of routes through the flat
Cambridge Fens or the hills of the Yorkshire Dales. While appetites for a
£300 commuter bike have waned, people who want to add another £10,000 bike
to their collection are still doing so, according to Shepherd.


Click here to read the complete article
Re: Active Travel: running into the buffers?

<kqpmj1F5sumU2@mid.individual.net>

  copy mid

https://www.novabbs.com/aus+uk/article-flat.php?id=32651&group=uk.rec.cycling#32651

  copy link   Newsgroups: uk.rec.cycling
Path: i2pn2.org!i2pn.org!usenet.goja.nl.eu.org!3.eu.feeder.erje.net!feeder.erje.net!news-2.dfn.de!news.dfn.de!fu-berlin.de!uni-berlin.de!individual.net!not-for-mail
From: jnug...@mail.com (JNugent)
Newsgroups: uk.rec.cycling
Subject: Re: Active Travel: running into the buffers?
Date: Sun, 5 Nov 2023 14:19:13 +0000
Organization: Home User
Lines: 227
Message-ID: <kqpmj1F5sumU2@mid.individual.net>
References: <kqp6q9F3bcfU1@mid.individual.net>
Reply-To: jnugent@mail.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
X-Trace: individual.net voZuzYL+NyJTdTpCPNVwlA131sf8KVaTnzYO7W3O7j3awyRBlr
Cancel-Lock: sha1:PFeAacldF7VW/eS9BRioX87/L4k= sha256:eKb6kCwT4T8fEpTPL63AeVTc/UXX+LSnHSE92KM1G8E=
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; WOW64; rv:60.0) Gecko/20100101
Thunderbird/60.6.1
In-Reply-To: <kqp6q9F3bcfU1@mid.individual.net>
Content-Language: en-GB
X-Antivirus: AVG (VPS 231105-2, 11/5/2023), Outbound message
X-Antivirus-Status: Clean
 by: JNugent - Sun, 5 Nov 2023 14:19 UTC

On 05/11/2023 09:50 am, Spike wrote:
>
> =====
> TL;DR
>
> Wiggle Chain Reaction Cycles - In administration
>
> Islabikes - ceased manufacture
>
> Three major UK distributors - gone bust
>
> Signa Sports United - announced redundancies
>
> Bianchi - announced redundancies
>
> Bicycle sales - dipped
>
> UK bike shops - record stocks
>
> Active travel - “disappointingly slow progress”
>
> =====
>
>
> Brexit, lack of cash, politics: has the UK cycling revolution run out of
> road?
>
> Bike sales boomed during the pandemic, but now cycle shops are going bust,
> sales of ebikes are sluggish and there’s a downturn in ‘active travel’
>
> James Tapper
> Sat 4 Nov 2023 17.00 GMT
>
> When Alice Clews-Smith and her partner, Kitty, moved to London, they didn’t
> see many options for pursuing their shared passion for cycling.
>
> “I think it’s fair to say that the industry and the cycling scene were very
> male dominated,” she said. “There was a lack of space for women,
> trans-femme, non-binary people. We wanted a space where these people could
> feel welcomed and included. And because not everything is about going fast
> in Lycra.”
>
> So was born the Steezy Collective, which brings together cyclists across
> the UK. Not that going fast is off the table. The collective noticed that
> there were no women in the Fastest Known Times list for the Lakeland 200
> route – 200km of mountain bike trails through the Lake District – so they
> set about correcting that, and now the list includes nine women riders,
> with their efforts captured on film.
>
> The existence of the Steezy Collective and others such as Sisters in the
> Wild, the Lakes Gravel Gang, the New Forest Off Road Club and 6am Cycling
> is part of a new wave of enthusiasts fuelled by the lockdown bicycle boom.
> Riders are now much more diverse than the cliched and not entirely accurate
> stereotype of middle-aged men in Lycra.
>
> With miles of cycle paths opening up in cities across the UK, people
> reacted during the pandemic lockdowns by buying bikes in record numbers,
> with latecomers facing months-long waits. By March 2021, cycle traffic in
> England was 64% higher than in December 2013.
>
> Now that has all changed. Last week, Wiggle Chain Reaction Cycles, one of
> the UK’s largest online cycle retailers, went into administration while
> Islabikes, which transformed the design of children’s bikes to make them
> lighter and easier to handle, said that it would stop manufacturing. The
> announcements came after three major UK distributors went bust, along with
> German company Signa Sports United, and the Italian firm Bianchi announced
> redundancies, Cycling Weekly reported.
>
> The whole industry generates about £7.5bn of added value to the UK economy
> and employs about 64,000 people
> Phillip Darnton, Bicycle Association
>
> So what went wrong?
>
> “We could see it before anyone else,” said Martin Shepherd at Reynolds
> Technology in Birmingham, which for the past 125 years has made steel tubes
> used to create bicycle frames.
>
> “During the pandemic, you couldn’t ship bikes fast enough,” he said.
> “Everybody’s lead time for orders [mostly to Taiwanese factories] started
> to go up nine months in advance, 12 months in advance.
>
> “Now we’ve come out of the other side of it, there’s just vast amounts of
> inventory because all those people who were having to order 500 bikes 18
> months in advance were suddenly swamped with stock.”
>
> Customers, on the other hand, had been hit hard in their bank accounts.
> Sales have dipped, leaving companies with stock that’s proving hard to
> shift – something analyst Velco described as an economic “whiplash effect”,
> where small changes are magnified down the supply chain. Some bikes can now
> be bought at steep discounts since 2024 models will be arriving in a matter
> of weeks.
>
> Shepherd said high interest rates, as well as post-Brexit trade barriers,
> were also playing their part. UK firms have specialised in mid- and
> high-end bikes, and sales to Europe had been substantial, but they have
> been hit by customs delays and extra charges. Now is an excellent time to
> buy a bike, but those bargains come with a price tag for the sector. If the
> market is flooded with more cheap stock, it could drive more firms out of
> business.
>
> UK bikes shops have record stocks just at the point when potential
> customers are facing a cost of living crunch. Photograph: David
> Pearson/Alamy
> “In the long term, it could result in less choice for consumers because the
> more high street shops that shut, the less people there are to fix a
> bicycle or advise them,” said Jonathan Harrison, director of the
> Association of Cycle Traders, which represents retailers and repairers.
>
> There have already been “quite a lot” of closures, he said, and there are
> now about 2,700 bike shops in the UK and another 1,100 workshops, hire
> centres and bike cafes.
>
> “The likes of Wiggle closing will have impacts on other businesses, too,
> because a lot of distributors have been over-reliant on them as a sales
> channel,” Harrison said. “So we will see further repercussions happen,
> particularly in the supply chain. But I think the market will bounce back.
> We still think there is room for growth in the number of people cycling.”
>
> There is another headwind for cyclists blowing from Westminster. Inspired
> by a narrow victory in the Uxbridge byelection in July, Rishi Sunak
> declared the end of an alleged “war on drivers”.
>
> Whether that amounts, as some fear, to a declaration of a new war on
> pedestrians and cyclists remains to be seen – the prime minister’s plan for
> drivers includes a clampdown on 20mph speed limits, bus lanes and
> low-traffic neighbourhoods (LTNs), having slashed funds for cycle lanes and
> pavements in March.
>
> There used to be cross-party consensus on active travel, but there’s been a
> substantial change over the last 18 months against anything perceived to be
> green. Duncan Dollimore, Cycling UK
>
> Last Friday, the Commons’ public accounts committee said there had been
> “disappointingly slow” progress on increasing active travel. The Department
> for Transport has been ordered to conduct an LTN review and has canvassed
> views from local authorities, which campaigners say could lead to reopening
> rat runs closed years ago by tarmacking over cul-de-sacs and ripping out
> bollards and other so-called modal filters.
>
> “During Covid we saw a massive increase in levels of cycling,” said Duncan
> Dollimore, head of campaigns at Cycling UK. “Since then, the numbers have
> dropped substantially and we’ve lost all the benefits. And part of the
> reason is government policy.
>
> “There used to be a cross-party consensus on active travel, but there’s
> been a very substantial change in tone over the last 18 months. The whole
> narrative from the government has been very much against anything that’s
> perceived to be green, and it’s quite toxic.”
>
> He said that a media campaign with “a certain degree of vilification of
> people cycling has an effect on people and then puts people off. The
> narrative against cycling isn’t helping these local industries.”
>
> Phillip Darnton, the chair of the Bicycle Association, which represents
> larger manufacturers and retailers, said they have been trying to persuade
> ministers that the cycling industry presents an opportunity to boost
> economic growth.
>
> “The whole industry is surprisingly valuable,” he said. “It’s probably
> generating about £7.5bn of added value to the UK economy and, if you
> include livelihoods, employs about 64,000 people.”
>
> Islabikes, which transformed children’s bikes to make them lighter and
> easier to handle, recently said it would cease manufacturing. Photograph:
> James Sturcke/Alamy
>
> While it is often tempting to look enviously at the Netherlands and
> Denmark, which have been investing in cycling and cycle lanes since the
> 1973 oil crisis, Darnton pointed to Germany as inspiration. “In Germany
> last year they sold about 2.2m electric bikes and were disappointed they
> couldn’t satisfy the last 100,000 orders,” he said. “In the UK, we
> struggled to sell 150,000.”
>
> France has had huge growth in ebike sales, he added, because the government
> had offered some modest subsidies. “The French say it’s not about how many
> euros or pounds but the very fact that the government says: ‘This is the
> strategy – we want to urge you not to use a car for short urban trips’ and
> makes it attractive for businesses to make deliveries in the last mile by
> cargo bike.”
>
> Cargo bikes – larger, usually electric, bikes with a separate carrier – are
> one remaining bright spot, with people adopting them in growing numbers.
>
> The trend is particularly noticeable in Cambridge, where it was
> instrumental in shielding Outspoken Cycles, which sells and services bikes
> in the city, from the worst of the lockdown effects, according to the
> shop’s general manager, Robert Hampton.
>
> “We haven’t had the overstock issue for cargo bikes,” he said. “We’re now
> back to a lead time of about four weeks. It’s been steady growth: 20% more
> this year than last year, and 20% more last year than the year before. It’s
> much more of a steady increase of people looking more to move out of using
> a car for everyday journeys.”
>
> Meanwhile, there are still plenty of riders who take the sport seriously,
> whether that’s taking one of the dozens of routes through the flat
> Cambridge Fens or the hills of the Yorkshire Dales. While appetites for a
> £300 commuter bike have waned, people who want to add another £10,000 bike
> to their collection are still doing so, according to Shepherd.
>
> At 6am Cycling, there is room for both types of rider. The club was started
> by Tom Glendining and Lesley Sharpe in 2015 and really took off when they
> began their Fri-Day rides – a dawn trip through Epping Forest followed by a
> fry-up.
>
> “It just started through a group of us going out really early on a Friday
> morning,” Glendining said. “And more people started joining.


Click here to read the complete article
Re: Active Travel: running into the buffers?

<kqpnl5F64gtU1@mid.individual.net>

  copy mid

https://www.novabbs.com/aus+uk/article-flat.php?id=32652&group=uk.rec.cycling#32652

  copy link   Newsgroups: uk.rec.cycling
Path: i2pn2.org!i2pn.org!usenet.goja.nl.eu.org!3.eu.feeder.erje.net!feeder.erje.net!news-2.dfn.de!news.dfn.de!fu-berlin.de!uni-berlin.de!individual.net!not-for-mail
From: aero.sp...@btinternet.invalid (Spike)
Newsgroups: uk.rec.cycling
Subject: Re: Active Travel: running into the buffers?
Date: 5 Nov 2023 14:37:25 GMT
Lines: 39
Message-ID: <kqpnl5F64gtU1@mid.individual.net>
References: <kqp6q9F3bcfU1@mid.individual.net>
<kqpmj1F5sumU2@mid.individual.net>
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
X-Trace: individual.net P/5rwo3djgjWZdyeYxW8+wwpfuCw5iZsOdj5ucaBEV7rq922tw
Cancel-Lock: sha1:pkkLcTiQjxFzpbaw5jnAe7yBNsc= sha1:EsoO0v89La5a+0U5bTy1AhV7t4I= sha256:4a79H2dv4y4ZzyD/+rauvRmTVRdytx49/4PE/SLfjps=
User-Agent: NewsTap/5.5 (iPhone/iPod Touch)
 by: Spike - Sun, 5 Nov 2023 14:37 UTC

JNugent <jnugent@mail.com> wrote:
> On 05/11/2023 09:50 am, Spike wrote:
>>
>> =====
>> TL;DR
>>
>> Wiggle Chain Reaction Cycles - In administration
>>
>> Islabikes - ceased manufacture
>>
>> Three major UK distributors - gone bust
>>
>> Signa Sports United - announced redundancies
>>
>> Bianchi - announced redundancies
>>
>> Bicycle sales - dipped
>>
>> UK bike shops - record stocks
>>
>> Active travel - “disappointingly slow progress”
>>
>> =====
>>
>> <https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2023/nov/04/brexit-lack-of-cash-politics-has-the-uk-cycling-revolution-run-out-of-road>
>
> QUOTE:
> Bike sales boomed during the pandemic, but now cycle shops are going
> bust, sales of ebikes are sluggish and there’s a downturn in ‘active travel’
> ENDQUOTE
>
> TRANSLATION: Reality strikes again. And very welcome it is, too.

Stand by for a paroxysm of ‘bigging up’ the so-called ‘active travel’ scene
from the self-interested cycling media groups, who hide their true agenda
behind the phrase.

--
Spike

1
server_pubkey.txt

rocksolid light 0.9.8
clearnet tor