Jumia Uganda has added Spiro electric bikes to its delivery fleet, substituting fuel-powered rides with eco-friendly and effective options.
Jumia’s partnership with Spiro is a daring move to lower Carbon monoxide emissions and encourage environmentally friendly online shopping.
Jumia’s delivery fleet will now include electric bikes, which will transform urban logistics and reduce carbon emissions.
Implications of Spiro-Jumia’s partnership
The implications of this move go beyond environmental protection and simple logistics. The introduction of e-bikes also reduces fuel and maintenance expenses for riders, increasing their take-home pay.
With this partnership, Jumia noted that half of its fleet will be electric, lowering expenses, reducing pollution, and contributing to a greener future for urban transportation.
“As nearly half of our fleet transitions to e-bikes, we are showing that e-commerce can be both convenient and climate-conscious. What starts in Kampala is just the beginning of a movement to reimagine mobility and commerce across Africa,” Jumia stated.
Benefits for customers
Through this partnership, customers will benefit from more dependable and reasonably priced doorstep deliveries. Additionally, it is a step toward lower carbon emissions and cleaner air for the city.
The collaboration is not just about adding a fleet of e-bikes; it also comes with a variety of benefits, such as:
- Less carbon footprint: switching to e-bikes from fuel-powered bikes reduces emissions and cleaner air.
- Cost effectiveness and sustainability: Jumia enhances operational sustainability while riders gain from lower maintenance and energy costs.
- Scalable impact: To hasten the adoption of environmentally friendly transportation, they are offering preferential rates to Jumia’s logistics partners.
Spiro’s goal is to empower riders
Spiro Uganda’s Deputy Director Bruce Mucunguzi emphasised that their goal is not just to deploy more bikes, but to empower riders, strengthen supply chains, and make clean mobility accessible to all.
“As we grow, our goal remains consistent: not just to deploy more bikes, but to empower riders, strengthen supply chains, and make clean mobility accessible to all,” Bruce Mucunguzi noted.
Thanks to this people-first strategy, Spiro has put over 10,000 bikes on the road with an expanding network of battery swap stations in just 15 months. For riders, that means more savings, dependability, and reduced operating expenses.
In addition to going green, this significant partnership will aid Uganda’s mobility transition, creating jobs, lessening daily burdens, and restoring dignity for communities and riders.