Rapido launches non-profit bike taxis in Karnataka
Rapido has launched Bike Direct, a non-profit bike taxi service in Karnataka, as Ola and Uber suspend their bike taxi operations in the state.
Rapido, a ride-hailing company in India, said Bike Direct is a non-commercial initiative meant to support drivers unable to secure bookings due to the lack of dedicated infrastructure.
The move comes after Karnataka’s transport minister called the resumption of bike taxi services a violation of a high court order and a misrepresentation of the court’s oral observation, leading Ola and Uber to remove the option from their apps.
Bike taxi services in Karnataka were suspended for over two months. They briefly resumed after the high court orally asked the state to frame a policy.
However, the court later clarified it had not issued any order permitting the services.
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Rapido’s launch of “Bike Direct” as a “humanitarian effort” demonstrates how companies adapt when faced with regulatory uncertainty.
While Uber and Ola completely suspended bike taxi services after Karnataka’s transport minister called their operations a “violation,” Rapido repositioned its service as “non-commercial” to continue operations1.
This strategic framing allows the company to serve its driver network while technically complying with the court’s restrictions, highlighting the creative solutions that emerge when regulations haven’t caught up with new business models.
The move reflects broader challenges in India’s bike taxi sector, where eight states permit operations but enforcement varies significantly, creating a patchwork of regulatory approaches across the country2.
The bike taxi ban’s impact on Karnataka’s 600,000 gig workers reveals how quickly policy changes can destabilize livelihoods in the platform economy1.
Over 100,000 gig workers lost their primary income source when the ban took effect in June, with many describing bike taxi services as their “only lifeline”3.
This economic vulnerability stems from the lack of formal employment protections for platform workers, who operate without traditional benefits like unemployment insurance or job security guarantees.
The situation highlights governance challenges in managing India’s growing gig economy, where workers face sudden policy shifts without adequate safety nets or alternative income sources during transitions4.
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