Uber, Ola hit a speed bump as Indian government caps surge pricing and issues new guidelines
Nov 27, 2020, 14:23 IST
- The Union Road Transport Ministry has issued new guidelines for motor vehicle aggregators.
- The driver should receive 80% of the fare applicable on each ride, while 20% will go to the aggregator, while surge pricing has been capped at 1.5 times the base fare.
- This will come as a blow for the cab aggregators Uber and Ola, who have been on a slow path to recovery after the coronavirus pandemic.
Advertisement
Indian ride-hailing aggregator businesses have hit a speed bump with the Indian government’s fresh motor vehicle aggregator guidelines. According to the Union Road Transport Ministry has issued new guidelines for motor vehicle aggregators:
- The driver should receive 80% of the fare applicable on each ride, while 20% will go to the aggregator.
- The aggregator will be allowed to charge only 50% lower than the base fare.
- Surge pricing has been capped at 1.5 times the base fare.
- The base fare will be for a minimum of 3 kilometres.
- The aggregators will have to ensure data localisation and ensure the data is stored in an Indian server for a minimum of three months and a maximum of four months from the date on which the data was generated.
- The data will also have to be made accessible to the Indian government as per law but customers data will not be shared without the consent of the user.
- The cab aggregators will also have to establish a 24X7 control room and all drivers will have to mandatorily be connected to the control room at all times.
- Additionally, the state government may by way of a notification direct 2% over and above the fare towards the state exchequer.
Business Insider has reached out to both Ola and Uber for their comments.
The new guidelines come at a time when cab drivers and auto-rickshaw drivers in Karnataka have been on strike demanding help from the state government on multiple issues, including interest-free loans up to ₹1 lakh for auto drivers and ₹2 lakh for cab drivers. The drivers, who were also demanding free housing from the state government, also sought implementation of a minimum fixed price and taxi metres, and cutting down on excessive commission charged by cab aggregators.
Advertisement
SEE ALSO:
Bitcoin’s record run over seven weeks makes a sharp U-turn but experts call it a healthy correction
‘SBI No $1B Adani loan’ — a screaming sign interrupts India vs Australia first ODI at Sydney