SHARE
COPY LINK

TAXI

Legal challenge greets Uber’s debut in Denmark

In the midst of a PR crisis in the United States, the alternative taxi concept Uber takes to the streets of Copenhagen – and is immediately greeted with a police complaint.

Legal challenge greets Uber's debut in Denmark
KAI PFAFFENBACH/Scanpix
The San Francisco-based Uber, which allows customers to order vehicles for hire and ridesharing services, launched in Copenhagen on Wednesday to no shortage of headlines and controversy. 
 
“Everyone in Copenhagen can now download our app and use our service. We've really looked forward to getting underway,” Uber’s Nordic director, Jo Bertram, told financial daily Børsen
 
But the news of a new major player in the taxi industry has the old guard vowing to fight. 
 
Dansk Taxi Råd, a business lobby group for the taxi industry that previously fought against the app-based service Drivr in Aarhus, said it would go all out to stop Uber’s entry into the Copenhagen market. 
 
“We will protest to all of the relevant authorities: the taxi board, the police, the Danish Transport Authority and the Transport Ministry,”  the head of Dansk Taxi Råd, Trine Wollenberg, told Børsen. 
 
 
By mid-morning on Wednesday, the Danish Transit Authority had filed a police complaint against the company. 
 
“Based on the available evidence, we believe that Uber violates passenger laws – both with their limousine service and their ride-sharing programme Uber Pop,” Transit Authority spokesman Mads Grundelund Gerlach told Børsen.
 
“If you offer a limousine service, you need permission from the municipality. If you don’t have that, it is illegal. In regards to the ride-sharing programme, we consider it on par with a taxi service. So if the vehicles don’t have a taxi licence, it is illegal,” he added. 
 
Uber plans to offer two services in Copenhagen: Uber Black, in which customers are picked up by a chauffeur-driven luxury car, and Uber Pop, in which private vehicle owners drive customers in their own cars. 
 
According to the company, the former will cost around 20 percent more than a typical cab ride in Copenhagen while the latter will be significantly less expensive than current market prices. 
 
To begin with, the company said that Uber Pop would be limited to a six-month trial in which only licenced chauffeurs will be allowed to participate. 
 
Existing taxi drivers say that the Uber Pop service creates “unfair competition” if Uber’s drivers and vehicles aren’t required to live up to the same requirements as others in the taxi business, which Børsen describes as one of the most thoroughly-regulated industries in Denmark. 
 
“Uber’s entry will create trouble in the city. The taxi branch will not be able to function with them on the streets. They will create a huge under-the-table economy that will be completely impossible to oversee,” Copenhagen taxi driver Hendrik Larsen told Børsen. 
 
Uber has already led to confrontations in cities such as Paris, Barcelona, Madrid, Rome and Berlin and its entry into Copenhagen comes in the midst of a brewing controversy in the United States.
 
Emil Michael, the company’s senior vice president of business, made comments at a swanky Manhattan dinner event that suggested that the company might consider hiring a team of professionals to dig up dirt on journalists who write negative stories on Uber. 
 
He later apologised for the comments, which he said were made at an off-the-record event. 
 
“The remarks attributed to me at a private dinner — borne out of frustration during an informal debate over what I feel is sensationalistic media coverage of the company I am proud to work for — do not reflect my actual views and have no relation to the company’s views or approach. They were wrong no matter the circumstance and I regret them,” he said in a statement. 
 
Uber was launched in 2009 and is currently operating in 47 countries. In neighbouring Germany, the company has faced strong legal challenges and was banned both on the national level and in Berlin. The national ban has since been overturned
 
Uber did not respond to The Local's requests for a comment. 

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

TAXI

Paris drivers fined and banned after tourists charged €230 for airport taxi trip

Three Paris drivers have been fined and banned from driving after tourists were charged €230 for a taxi from Charles de Gaulle airport into the city, in a case brought by Paris taxi authorities to try and deter unlicensed drivers from performing this type of scam.

Paris drivers fined and banned after tourists charged €230 for airport taxi trip
Illustration photo: Philippe Lopez/AFP

Taxi fees from the airport into the city are capped at €53 for the Right Bank and €58 for the Left Bank, but tourists are frequently ripped off by unlicensed drivers who operate at airports and large train stations.

The latest case involved passengers who arrived from Hong Kong on January 1st and were charged €230 for the trip into the city centre.

This time the taxi drivers’ association L’association les Nouveaux Taxis Parisiens brought a civil action against the scammers, fed up with the overcharging which, they say, brings their profession into disrepute.

READ ALSO What you need to know about taking a taxi in Paris

Three men were brought before the court over the scam and produced a convoluted tale of extra charges for clearing up vomit from drunk passengers, which the Hong Kong tourists denied, while one man claimed he had only been at the airport to buy Nespresso capsules, to which the magistrate replied ‘Mmmmmm’, according to French newspaper Le Parisien

The driver was fined €200 for overcharging and banned from driving for a year, while his accomplice was banned from driving for six months. Both were ordered to pay €1,000 in damages. A third man, who was not present but whose legitimate taxi license the unlicensed driver was using, was given a €1,000 suspended fine and ordered to pay €1,000 in damages for complicity in the illegal practice of the profession.

Jean Barriera, leader of the taxi drivers’ association, said afterwards that he did not think the sentences were severe enough, adding that he had brought the case: “To defend the image of cabs. It’s the whole profession that these individuals sully.”

Paris, Nice, Cannes, Antibes, Toulouse and several other French cities have fixed rates for taxis, you can find the full list here

However these only apply to official taxis. If you are using a VTC service like Uber the price will vary depending on availability, although it will be fixed before you get into the car.

Unlicensed drivers are common at airports and stations including Gare du Nord. French taxi drivers are not allowed to solicit for fares, so if someone approaches you and offers you a taxi they are probably unlicensed – instead go to the taxi rank to find an official vehicle.

Click here for the full list of rates and what you need to know about taking a taxi in France.

SHOW COMMENTS