*** ----> Dubai bans hoverboards for good | THE DAILY TRIBUNE | KINGDOM OF BAHRAIN

Dubai bans hoverboards for good

Dubai has decided to do away with hoverboards “hovering” around the city.

The city reportedly joined New York, Netherlands, UK, Hong Kong and New South Wales, Australia in banning the self-balancing scooters in public.

According to Gulf News, the guidelines surrounding the use of hoverboards – were clarified on Sunday, after Dubai Municipality confirmed of their ban in public areas.

Residents found flouting the rules will have their hoverboards confiscated, according to the municipality’s rules and regulations.

Sultan Al Suwaidi, deputy head of the municipality’s Public Health and Safety Department, told Gulf News that as per the new guidelines, hoverboards are prohibited in crowded areas, sidewalks, roads, and other public areas.

They can only be used in designated parks that have an allocated space for bicycles.

“The rules state that hoverboards should only be used in designated areas, which means that they are allowed on cycling tracks in parks and anywhere else that allow skateboards or bicycles,” he said.

Up until recently, the Dubai Department of Economic Development had banned the hoverboards only in shopping malls.

Al Suwaidi explained that to protect the public’s safety, users are now required to wear helmets, gloves, elbows and knee pads to ride the hoverboards. Children are also required to be under adult supervision.

The popular toys are powered by an electric motor fed by lithium batteries, allowing riders to control the gadgets at speeds of more than 15km/h. On a two-hour charge, hoverboards can run for up to four hours on average.

“We also addressed the issue of how hoverboards should be used because otherwise, they posed a risk to other people [in the vicinity],” he said, adding that they should be charged as instructed by the manufacturing company, and should not be in contact with flammable material.

Social media has been flooded daily with videos of hoverboards catching fire and exploding and news stories recounting house fires in Europe and North America attributed to overcharging the devices.

“The new rules clearly state that hoverboards should be used by one person at a time. People who have a high safety risk, such as those who are pregnant or who have fractured bones, should not be using it either,” he said.

The safety issue regarding hoverboards came under the spotlight after the death of a six-year-old Emirati child who was run over by a car in Abu Dhabi last October, while travelling on a hoverboard. These balance wheels are battery-powered boards which resemble a skateboard or a mini Segway without a handle.

Following the incident, Dubai Police warned hoverboard owners to stay off roads, sidewalks and car parks while riding their devices or they will be fined Dh200 as pedestrians who are not abiding local traffic laws.

Photo: factodesign.com