Reported in the Environmental  Protection Online, Philippine government will replace the Pedi-cab or the  tricycles-taxis with Electronic Trikes.
The Philippines will be introducing electronic  tricycle taxis to replace its petrol-fuelled models, which could cut carbon  dioxide emissions by a quarter of million tons.
The Asian Development Bank (ADB) will provide  $300 million and The Philippines government will provide an additional $99  million to the project. Tricycle taxis are one of the Philippines' most widely  used forms of transport for travelling short distances, but they are also  responsible for more than two-thirds of air pollution.
The ADB estimates that there are 200,000  tricycles in the Manila metropolitan region alone, and about 3.5 million in the  entire country. The tricycles use nearly $5 billion of imported fuel every  year, produce about ten million tons of carbon dioxide, and are the biggest  source of particulate pollution in urban areas. The World Bank estimates that  the total economic burden of air pollution to the Philippines economy is more  than $150 million each year.
The project aims to replace 100,000  petrol-fuelled tricycles with 'clean, energy efficient' electric tricycles  (e-trikes) in a 'lease-to-own' arrangement.
'Every 20,000 e-Trikes that are introduced to  Manila's streets will save the Philippines 100,000 liters of foreign fuel  imports each day, worth US$35 million annually,' says the ADB's principal energy  specialist, Sohail Hasnie
E-Trikes will use lithium-ion batteries, a form  of battery widely used in consumer electronics such as mobile phones, which can  be recharged 2,000 times before being replaced. A test run earlier this year  showed that tricycle operators more than doubled their incomes when using  e-Trikes.
'E-Trikes are a cleaner, greener transport  solution for the Philippines and provide a better quality of life for tricycle  drivers,' says Neeraj Jain, the ADB's country director for the Philippines.  'This project can help transform transportation in the Philippines and  positions the country as a leader in electric vehicle development in Asia.'




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