Back in business in Barcelona Uber said Tuesday it was back in Barcelona with 120 professional drivers after it was forced out three years ago over the suspension of its service that enables unregulated drivers to ferry passengers for money using their own cars.
Its uberX service started operations in the Mediterranean city on Tuesday with cars that have been given a licence to carry passengers for pay, a spokeswoman for the company told AFP.
US-based Uber—which links customers to drivers using a smartphone app—was forced out of Spain in 2014 by legal pressure and protests from taxi drivers.
A Spanish judge in 2014 suspended the company's UberPop service which enables unregulated drivers to ferry passengers, saying the drivers had to be given official authorisation to transport clients.
Then in December 2017, the EU's top court validated this, ruling that Uber was an ordinary transportation company instead of an app and should be regulated as such.
In Spain, the powerful taxi industry, which groups together close to 70,000 licences and 100,000 employees, has for several years fought against ride-hailing companies such as Uber or Spain's Cabify, accusing them of unfair competition.
On Tuesday, the Elite Taxi company, which had campaigned against UberPop, pledged to track Uber's activities in Barcelona and any potential offences committed.
The industry's main federation, Fedetaxi, also asked Barcelona's city hall to be "uncompromising."
Taxi drivers complain that Uber-type services are endangering their jobs and that ride-hailing companies are not implementing existing rules.
Spanish regulations stipulate there should be a quota of one licensed vehicle from companies like Uber or Cabify for every 30 taxis.
But official figures show there are more licensed vehicles than that.
In December, the Spanish government tried to address the issue with the creation of a national register that will allow authorities to better control the situation.
Spain has around 7,000 licensed vehicles, according to the transport ministry.
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