Hanoi scooter riders balk at gas-powered bikes ban

TWO-WHEELED MOTORISTS. This photo taken on July 17, 2025 shows commuters driving motorbikes on a street in Hanoi. (Photo courtesy: Nhac Nguyen/AFP)

By Agence France-Presse

Vietnam’s plan to bar gas-guzzling motorbikes from central Hanoi may clear the air of the smog-smothered capital, but riders fear paying a high toll for the capital’s green transition.

“Of course, everyone wants a better environment,” said housewife Dang Thuy Hanh, balking at the VND 80 million ($3,000) her family would spend replacing their four scooters with electric alternatives.

“But why give us the first burden without any proper preparation?” grumbled the 52-year-old.

Hanoi’s scooter traffic is a fixture of the city’s urban buzz. The northern hub of nine million people has nearly seven million two-wheelers, hurtling around at rush hour in a morass of congestion.

Their exhausts splutter emissions regularly, spurring the city to the top of worldwide smog rankings in a country where pollution claims at least 70,000 lives a year, according to the World Health Organization.

The government last weekend announced plans to block fossil-fueled bikes from Hanoi’s 31 square kilometer (12 square mile) center by next July. It will expand in stages to forbid all gas-fueled vehicles in urban areas of the city in the next five years.

SANDWICHED BETWEEN BIGGER VEHICLES. This photo taken on July 17, 2025 shows motorbikes and other vehicles being driven in heavy traffic in Hanoi. (Photo courtesy: Nhac Nguyen/AFP)

Hanh—one of the 600,000 people living in the central embargo zone—said the looming cost of e-bikes has left her fretting over the loss of “a huge amount of savings.”

While she conceded e-bikes may help relieve pollution, she bemoaned the lack of public charging points near her home down a tiny alley in the heart of the city.

“Why force residents to change while the city’s infrastructure is not yet able to adapt to the new situation?” she asked.

Many families in communist-run Vietnam own at least two motorcycles for daily commutes, school runs, work, and leisure. Proposals to reform transport for environmental reasons often spark allegations the burden of change is felt highest by the working class.

London has since 2023 charged a toll for older, higher pollution-emitting vehicles.

France’s populist “Yellow Vest” protests starting in 2018 were in part sparked by allegations President Emmanuel Macron’s “green tax” on fuel was unfair for the masses.

BATTERY-POWERED TWO WHEELERS. This photo taken on July 17, 2025 shows new electric motorbikes at a parking lot in Hanoi. Scooter riders in the Vietnamese capital cite lack of charging infrastructure and high prices as major hurdles for them to ditch their gas-powered bikes in support of sustainable mobility. (Photo courtesy: Nhac Nguyen/AFP)

‘Cost too high’

Hanoi authorities say they are considering alleviating the financial burden by offering subsidies of at least VND 3 million ($114) per switch to an e-bike and also increasing public bus services.

Food delivery driver Tran Van Tan, who rides his bike 40 kilometers (25 miles) every day from neighbouring Hung Yen province to downtown Hanoi, says he makes his living “on the road.”

“The cost of changing to an e-bike is simply too high,” said the 45-year-old, employed through the delivery app Grab. “Those with a low income like us just cannot suddenly replace our bikes.”

Compared with a traditional two-wheeler, he also fears the battery life of e-bikes “won’t meet the needs for long-distance travel.”

But citing air pollution as a major threat to human health, the environment and quality of life, Deputy Mayor Duong Duc Tuan earlier this week said “drastic measures are needed.”

PATRIOTIC BACKDROP. This photo taken on July 17, 2025 shows a woman riding a motorbike past a wall painted with the Vietnamese national flag in Hanoi. (Photo courtesy: Nhac Nguyen/AFP)

In a recent report, Hanoi’s environment and agriculture ministry said over half of the poisonous smog that blankets the city for much of the year comes from petrol and diesel vehicles. The World Bank puts the figure at 30 percent, with factories and waste incineration also cited as major culprits.

Several European cities, such as Barcelona, Paris and Amsterdam have also limited the use of internal combustion engines on their streets—and other major Vietnamese cities are looking to follow suit.

The southern business hub Ho Chi Minh City aims to gradually transition delivery and service motorbikes to electric over the next few years.

But with the high costs, office worker Nguyen My Hoa thinks the capital’s ban will not be enforceable.

“Authorities will not be able to stop the huge amount of gasoline bikes from entering the inner districts,” 42-year-old Hoa said. “It simply does not work.”

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