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Tokyo taxi firms to take on global peers with ride-sharing apps

TOKYO >> Travelers to Tokyo may be surprised to find their perceptions of the high-tech metropolis to be far from reality when it comes to the use of ride-hailing smartphone apps such as Uber and Lyft.

But two taxi companies are looking to bring Tokyo up to speed with its global peers by introducing separate cab-sharing apps in a bid to offer lower prices and attract new customers despite the shrinking market.

Taxis in Japan are known for their clean interiors and quality service. They are also known for their expensive fares — partially a result of tough regulations that have protected the industry and kept out new competitors like Uber. The San Francisco-based company’s main car-hailing service is banned in Japan, where unlicensed, privately operated cars and drivers are forbidden.

But taxi companies have remained wary of the potential disruption services like Uber could bring to Japan’s market if the firm were to make a full entry, and they have been devising ways to make their own services more accessible.

A seven-week trial launched in January by Nihon Kotsu Co. and Daiwa Motor Transportation Co. could be a chance to offer consumers a taste of the convenience and cheaper fares sometimes available through ride-sharing services.

While the apps offered by the fleet operators function differently, both will allow customers with similar departure and destination points to share taxis and reduce fares by an estimated 30 percent.

Nihon Kotsu’s app is similar to that of Uber, allowing customers to choose pickup and drop-off locations while the service looks for passengers riding on similar routes.

Daiwa’s service, which has been built within its existing taxi-hailing app, designates 30 predetermined pickup points. Users can choose their ride schedule — including pickup and drop-off points — or choose from a list of rides already posted by other users.

A ride from Tokyo’s Otemachi financial district to Shibuya, for example, usually costs about $43. Sharing a ride, however, can reduce that price to $26.50, according to Nihon Kotsu.

Both services require payment by pre-registered credit cards, and the apps are only available in Japanese for now.

“We want to start with Japanese users and potentially expand the service to include the growing number of inbound tourists that are visiting Japan,” said Tatsuya Uehara, an official from the marketing division of Japan Taxi, a startup launched by Nihon Kotsu that created the app.

The current trial, which is overseen by the land ministry and will continue until March 11, takes place in Tokyo’s 23 wards and the cities of Musashino and Mitaka in western Tokyo. In total, 300 Nihon Kotsu taxis and 649 Daiwa taxis are taking part in the experiment.

Figures from the Japan Federation of Hire-Taxi Associations shows that the number of taxi passengers in 2014 was 1.56 billion compared to 2.24 billion in 2004, a 30 percent decline. The number of taxis also fell to 228,325 from 265,480 over the same period.

Japan attracted a record 28.69 million tourists in 2017, up 19.3 percent from the previous year.

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