BEIJING, Aug. 20 (Xinhua) -- Wanna tour Beijing? Rent
a bike. The Olympic city plans to put 50,000 bicycles for rent across the city
ahead of the Games to curb pollution and ease congestion.
Brand new bikes will be available at 230 outlets
close to subway stations, commercial districts, Olympic venues, hotels and
office buildings as well as in big communities, according to a "rent a bike"
program carried out by Beijing Bicycle Rental Services, a Beijing-based company.
The company has so far put 5,000 bikes for rent at 30
franchise outlets close to the Beijing Workers Stadium, the Drum Tower, the
Forbidden City and the Xidan commercial street, according to the company's
website.
Before next August, the network will be expanded to
cover major communities and all the Olympic venues, said Wang Yong, general
manager of Beijing Bicycle Rental Services. "Organizations and individuals are
welcome to join our service network for free, as long as they can provide an
area about the size of one parking space."
Wang said his company would provide all the bikes for
rent, and franchise outlets would get 1 Yuan a day for each bike they operate as
running costs.
"The outlets will also get profit sharing at the end
of each month, based on their own business incomes," he said. "Not every outlet
can make a profit, as people can rent a bike at one outlet and drop it somewhere
else close to their destinations."
The bicycle rental program is also sponsored by the
Beijing Environment Protection Bureau as well as the anti-theft arm of the
municipal public security bureau, because bicycles are frequently stolen in the
city.
"This is like a centralized management of bicycles so
that citizens won't have to worry about thefts," said police officer Wang
Xiaobing.
To embrace next year's Olympic Games, Beijing, a city
with 3 million motor vehicles and more than 4 million drivers, is working
all-out to ease congestion and curb pollution.
Monday is the last day of Beijing's four-day
experiment to test whether pulling 1.3 million cars off its roads each day would
prove effective in reducing air pollution during the Games.
Drivers with even-numbered license plates, excluding
taxis, buses and emergency vehicles, were told to stay off the roads on Friday
and Sunday or face fines. Odd-numbered cars were banned on Saturday and Monday.
Experts say pulling 1.3 million motor vehicles off
the roads in Beijing each day can reduce exhaust emissions by 40 percent.
Though Beijing's sky remained mostly gray and misty
as a result of stuffy, humid late summer weather, nearly everyone felt the roads
were smoother. "Going to work by bus took me only 15 minutes," said Zhang
Jianguo, a government employee. "Driving took almost the same time."