Uber now eyes Cambodia
From Khmer Time:
US-based Uber will conduct a study on the feasibility of operating its ride-sharing services here in Cambodia, its representatives told the Commerce Ministry on Friday.
US-based Uber will conduct a study on the feasibility of operating its ride-sharing services here in Cambodia, its representatives told the Commerce Ministry on Friday.
Commerce
Minister Pan Sorasak told Uber Asia-Pacific representatives Chan Park
and Brian Shroder that the increased proliferation of internet and
mobile phone users in the kingdom will only help the company set up shop
here.
“E-commerce
law will come into force very soon and it will be more convenient to
boost e-payment which will make the running of Uber’s business here very
smooth,” Mr. Sorasak said.
He
recommended that Uber register with the ministry and cooperate with the
Public Works and Transportation Ministry as well as the Post and
Telecom Ministry to ensure that the company, currently headquartered in
San Francisco, fully understands the local demographic.
According
to both Uber representatives, the app-based Uber service is currently
updating its technology to make it easier for smartphone users to get to
their destinations.
On
Thursday, Japanese company FIGIX Industry Co. Ltd. in collaboration
with a group of Cambodian engineers launched taxi-booking service
Itsumo. Its developer guarantees that users will be picked up by a
driver within three minutes of a request and will be sent anywhere in
the city.
The base fare starts at 4,500 riel ($1.10) and increases by $0.50 per kilometer.
“The
app is available in three languages – Khmer, English and Japanese,” Rin
Darith, Project manager of the iTsumo Taxi, told Khmer Times.
“You
can download iTsumo – the Cambodia Taxi from both Apple Store for your
iOS phone or from Google Play for your Android phone.
With
iTsumo, passengers can easily find the nearest taxi without having the
difficulty of explaining the place they are going to,” added Mr. Darith.
The company is considering expanding its services to Siem Reap and Battambang provinces in the near future, he said.
Grab
is biggest rival to Uber in Southeast Asia, and has raised $750 million
in a funding round, turning up the heat on the US firm now seeking to
expand in the region after exiting China.
