October 21, 2008

Jenny Jones, unelected, uninformed.


vISIT tHE tAXI-mART sHOP

 Jenny Jones 57, assembly member for the Green party, has asked the Mayor to reconsider his approach on the mid term checks on London Taxis.
Boris has been quoted as saying that the mid term safety checks were "dead, it's as dead as a dodo its an ex test".
Unelected assembly member Jones, is the safety ambassador for cyclists. She was badly hurt in a cycling accident recently when, not wearing safety pads or a protective helmet, a car clipped her rear wheel. She hit the kerb fell off and broke her arm.
The Madwoman of Chaillot as she is known in the cab trade, points to the number of taxi safety inspection failures, from figures issued by SGS. Unfortunately she has not investigated the facts behind the figures.
Cabs are failing the test because of the wrong documentation (meter certificate and insurance cover note) and also the unreliable smoke test.
Unreliable because it all depends on whether the engine is hot, warm or cold. When a taxi arrives at SCS, if too early, most drivers who are not mechanics will switch off their engine and while they wait, the engine cools. With a cold engine the cab will fail the smoke test. Cabs that have failed the smoke test have been retested the next day with a warm engine and passed, with no modification whatsoever.
Very few if any are failing for safety defects.
She also made a comment about the recent fires in TX4's, but what she failed to say was that all the vehicles affected where 56 plates and ALL had, had a mid term safety check which never identified a fire risk.
London Taxis have the best safety record of any form of public transport in the world. We are reasonable for 60,000,000 passenger journeys a year and are recorded as being involved in only 1% of traffic accidents.
After over a hundred years of motorised taxis, the mid term test was an unnecessary extra expense. It only came about because TFL felt it necessary to inspect private hire vehicles twice a year, as they are not purpose built to do the work of a taxi.
This is a another reason why the taxi trade and the private hire trade must be separated. We do not do the same work, we do not drive the same vehicle and we should not be governed by the same licensing authority.

http://theandersonshelter.blogspot.com/2008/10/madwoman-of-chaillot-pokes-her-nose-in.html

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Geely aims to electrify black cabs


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Geely, the Chinese automaker that co-owns the company that produces black London taxis, has met UK government officials about bringing electric-powered cabs to the UK capital.

"One of our ideas is to convert London taxis into electric," Li Shufu, the company's chairman, told the Financial Times. "We are doing research on this project."

Geely owns about 23 per cent of Manganese Bronze, the Coventry-based producer of black London cabs, and 51 per cent of a Shanghai-based joint venture with the UK company that will produce the cars in China starting this December.

Mr Li said that he had discussed the idea of electric taxis in London with Boris Johnson, the city's mayor, at the Beijing Olympic games in August. Mr Johnson supports the idea.

Manganese Bronze this year signed a research and development agreement with Tanfield Electric Vehicles to develop all-electric plug-in taxis. Manganese Bronze's share price has slumped in recent weeks after hundreds of its TX4 cabs were taken off the streets following a series of engine fires.

Geely, like China's other rising automakers, is developing its own plug-in hybrid and electric cars, including an electric version of its Panda city car that it may seek to sell in Europe. Mr Li said developing electric vehicle technology would be a major strategic focus for the company in future.

Geely's plan to build London taxis in Shanghai is one of a string of investments by Chinese companies seeking to apply low-cost production to iconic overseas assets.

Rival carmaker SAIC recently relaunched production of MG TF sports cars in Longbridge and makes the Roewe brand of cars in China largely based on tools and designs formerly owned by bankrupt MG Rover.

LTI Shanghai Automobile, the JV, plans to sell the Shanghai-built cabs to taxi operators, hotels, and other buyers in China and overseas, with a view eventually to building 10,000 vehicles a year.

The Chinese operation will also supply parts produced at a lower cost to LTI's flagship operation in the UK.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/79089ff4-9e3f-11dd-bdde-000077b07658.html?nclick_check=1

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