HomeFundingIreland-based Zipp Mobility nabs €1.3 million to support e-scooter expansion plans

Ireland-based Zipp Mobility nabs €1.3 million to support e-scooter expansion plans

Zipp Mobility, the Irish shared micromobility operator, today announced that it has closed a €1.3 million funding round. The company has secured a total of €500K from two prominent angel investors, €250K from Enterprise Ireland and €562K through a crowdfunding campaign on the Spark Crowdfunding platform.

Zipp Mobility has now raised over €2 million in funding and a number of high-profile private investors, including former Irish rugby international Brian O’Driscoll, have already invested in the company.

The company is currently operating e-scooter schemes in 8 cities across Poland (3) and the UK (5). It now plans to significantly increase the number of e-scooters it operates in the coming months as it prepares to roll-out its shared e-scooter service across Ireland, pending e-scooter legislative approval), expand current operations and launch in additional European countries. The company currently employs a staff of 25 and expects to grow the team to 35 by the end of 2021.

As a homegrown Irish startup, Zipp is also already in close discussions with a number of local authorities in advance of the expected approval by the Dáil later this year of the Road Traffic (Miscellaneous Provisions) Bill which will allow for the regulation of e-scooters on Irish roads.

Zipp Mobility which was founded in 2019 by Charlie Gleeson is headquartered at NovaUCD, the Centre for New Ventures and Entrepreneurs at University College Dublin. Charlie Gleeson, CEO and Founder, Zipp Mobility said: “We have experienced great momentum in the last 12 months, showcasing our service to hundreds of thousands of people across the UK and mainland Europe. We are now excited to grow our European position, following our latest funding round, by continuing to offer sustainable transport alternatives to millions of people across the continent.”

He added: “Over the last two years we have been in discussions with Irish local authorities, and we have been sharing our international experience with them to ensure that scooter-sharing schemes are rolled out safely and responsibly once e-scooters are legalised in Ireland.”

Since last November, Zipp Mobility’s UK customers have completed over 150,000 journeys and spent over 1 million minutes on their scooters, resulting in approximately a 70-tonne reduction in carbon emissions.

Zipp e-scooter features an aircraft-grade aluminium frame, 10-inch airless tyres, a swappable battery, dual braking, a wide base and a low centre of gravity. Zipp also maintain a policy of only using zero-emission vehicles (electric vans and cargo bikes) to manage their operations.

To ensure safety, Zipp also uses geofencing, a virtual perimeter for a real-world geographic area, meaning that e-scooters will not work outside of designated areas and slowdown in designated ‘slow speed zones’. Scooters must also be parked specially designated “parking bays” to prevent obstructions in the city. Each e-scooter has a lifetime of more than two years, compared with the estimated industry average for shared scooters of just 18 months.

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Charlotte Tucker
Charlotte Tucker
Charlotte is the previous Editor at EU-Startups.com. She spends her time scouting the next big story, managing our contributor team, and getting excited about social impact ventures. She has previously worked as a Communications Consultant for number of European Commission funded startup projects.
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