Skip to main content

Advertisement

Advertisement

Beam scores funding to bring e-scooters to Singapore

SINGAPORE — Singapore’s sidewalks are about to get a lot more crowded. Beam, co-founded by the former Asian chief for Chinese bike-sharing giant Ofo, has raised US$6.4 million (S$8.84 million) from investors including Sequoia India to deploy its electric scooters around the island nation.

Beam scores funding to bring e-scooters to Singapore
Follow TODAY on WhatsApp

SINGAPORE — Singapore’s sidewalks are about to get a lot more crowded. Beam, co-founded by the former Asian chief for Chinese bike-sharing giant Ofo, has raised US$6.4 million (S$8.84 million) from investors including Sequoia India to deploy its electric scooters around the island nation.

Beam just closed a seed funding round led by Sequoia India, Founders Fund, ZhenFund and Class 5 Global, Beam said in a statement. Its other backers include Arbor, Insignia, 500 Startups, Gobi and K2 Global. The financing will help bankroll a fleet of e-scooters manufactured by Segway Ninebot, backed by smartphone maker Xiaomi Corp.

Beam, whose co-founder also headed up Indonesia for Uber Technologies, is trying to replicate the success of Bird Rides and Lime in Asia. While those American startups have scaled quickly after raising massive amounts of money, they have yet to arrive in the region. In perennially muggy Singapore however, e-scooters are already becoming a popular — if occasionally divisive — mode of transportation among food delivery people and city commuters.

“We want to change the fundamental way that people move around Asian cities,” Chief Executive Officer Alan Jiang said in the statement. He previously led Ofo’s Asia Pacific operations and served as Uber’s country manager in Indonesia.

Beam plans to roll out its service in coming weeks before eventually taking the platform to Malaysia, Australia and South Korea. Consumers will use the service by locating and unlocking a scooter using their phones. They’ll pay S$1 to start with, then 15 Singaporean cents a minute, with no deposit required. Similar to the U.S. e-scooter firms, Beam plans to provide financial incentives to people who can locate, charge and redistribute the scooters.

Beam said its other backers include Pascal Capital, Maloekoe Ventures and Cherubic Ventures. BLOOMBERG

Read more of the latest in

Advertisement

Advertisement

Stay in the know. Anytime. Anywhere.

Subscribe to get daily news updates, insights and must reads delivered straight to your inbox.

By clicking subscribe, I agree for my personal data to be used to send me TODAY newsletters, promotional offers and for research and analysis.