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Energy crunch fuels car pool growth

Emma Reilly by Emma Reilly
May 30, 2026
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Last year, carpooling platform BlaBlaCar posted record-breaking figures in India as users seek cheaper ways to travel. ©AFP

New Delhi (AFP) – Rising fuel prices triggered by the Middle East war are driving a sharp increase in carpooling, with a ride-sharing platform reporting a surge in new users seeking cheaper ways to travel. The world’s largest carpooling platform, BlaBlaCar, said soaring energy costs have pushed 600,000 additional drivers onto the app this year — 20 percent more than initially projected — as commuters look to offset the rising cost of fuel.

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In India, its single biggest market with more than 20 million users projected by 2025, the number of passengers has increased by 40 percent since the start of the US-Israeli airstrikes against Iran on February 28. Last year, the global carpooling leader posted record-breaking figures in the world’s most populous country, India — outpacing Brazil with 19 million users and France with seven million, according to Benjamin Retourne, the platform’s product director.

This trend has been more pronounced in countries where fuel price increases driven by the war have been sudden and significant, combined with limited government support, such as in France. The platform works by connecting drivers and passengers willing to travel together between cities to share costs, with the app in most of its 21 operating nations taking a 20 percent commission.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi earlier in May urged the country’s 1.4 billion citizens to save fuel by making greater use of carpooling and public transport. India imports approximately half of its crude oil via the Strait of Hormuz, which Tehran effectively closed in retaliation to US-Israeli strikes launched in February.

Retourne said a decade ago, when BlaBlaCar first launched in India, even “after two or three years, it just wasn’t catching on.” The company, founded in France in 2006, therefore stopped investing in the world’s fastest-growing economy but kept its application running from its Paris headquarters, unlike many large foreign groups that outsourced their services to India. Growth finally began to pick up after the Covid-19 pandemic, driven by the country’s economic and digital acceleration, as well as word of mouth.

Retourne pointed to a growth in private car ownership as well as rapid urbanization, with 200 million additional city dwellers over the past decade. “People are very connected,” he said, adding that “today, wherever you go, there is 5G.” That proved to be the “recipe for carpooling to take off.” But he was surprised that a driving factor was not the cost — but rather to avoid often crowded buses or trains. “The number one reason people choose carpooling is not price, but comfort,” he said.

The market potential remains vast, with “a new segment of the population” eager to travel for leisure and visit friends and family.

Assistant bank manager Pratyush Anuraj, 24, from India’s financial capital Mumbai, said he used the carpooling platform to travel to his family’s home in Pune every weekend — a 150-kilometre (93-mile) journey of around 2.5 hours. “It’s cheaper than the train, the bus, or a private taxi,” he said. “It also saves time, as there are few stops and the vehicle doesn’t wait beyond the scheduled time.” He does, however, point out some drawbacks: either the trip is often cancelled at the last minute, or the drivers don’t answer calls.

So far, the French platform has not monetised carpooling in India, where people pay each other directly, often using the popular digital UPI mobile telephone payment systems. It now wants to evolve its model. The next objective is to “build a platform that aggregates multiple modes of transport” — connecting cars to buses and trains.

© 2024 AFP

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