European employers paying employees to bike to work

Some firms also providing, maintaining bicycles

(Reuters) — Getting paid for going to work may sound too good to be true, but it's part of an increasingly popular scheme for commuters across Europe.

Employers in Belgium, the Netherlands and other European countries are rewarding staff if they come to work on a bicycle, paying them for every kilometer they cycle, all in an effort to promote environmentalism, not to mention a healthier lifestyle.

In Belgium, cycling commuters are being paid 20 euro cents(US$0.29) per kilometer, whereas those in the Netherlands can earn 15 cents and participants in Britain up to 20 pence (US$0.32) per mile — all of it tax-free.

In Belgium, a popular cycling nation and home to five-time Tour de France and Giro D'Italia winner Eddie Merckx, finance ministry figures show more than 270,000 people took part in the scheme last year, up from 140,000 in 2006.

Last year, that meant the Belgian tax man paid out 43 million euros (US$62) to those who bill for cycling to work.

"Higher oil prices and environmental awareness contribute to having more cyclists on the road," said Dieter Snauwaert, co-ordinator of the bike-to-work scheme of the Flemish cyclists' union in Belgium.

One of the most successful corporate proponents has been Belgian discount supermarket chain Colruyt, which launched the policy four years ago and now has 2,100 participants.

Colruyt provides employees who live up to seven km away from work with a bicycle and takes care of maintenance.

Company spokesman Victor De Meester said apart from employees being healthier there were also other advantages.

"The more people cycle to work the fewer parking spaces you have to offer. It's not so easy, especially in urban areas, to expand parking spaces," he said.

Colruyt, which has more than 22,000 employees, is now looking to target those who live further away than seven km by offering electric bicycles to make it easier to negotiate larger distances.

"Our target is 400 participants by 2015 but given the response we have had so far this may be too low a number," De Meester said.

Colruyt's belief employees who cycle to work are healthier than their colleagues who don't is backed up by research from Dutch organization TNO.

The researcher found over the course of one year, cycling employees on average lose one working day less due to illness than employees who commute by other means.

If the number of workers who cycle to work increased by one per cent, Dutch employers would save a total of 27 million euros per year, TNO said.

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