Crackdown looms on e-bikes, scooters after more deaths

Melissa Meehan and Andrew Stafford |

A teenage boy has died after being hit by a car while riding an e-bike in Melbourne’s north east.
A teenage boy has died after being hit by a car while riding an e-bike in Melbourne’s north east.

Two people have been killed in separate e-mobility accidents in 24 hours, as multiple states grapple with whether – and how – to regulate the devices.

Ryley Ziebell, 14, died on Monday night when his e-bike and a 4WD collided at Diamond Creek, in Melbourne’s northeast.

He was treated at the scene but could not be saved.

“Ryley was a beautiful-natured boy who was incredibly loved and will be sadly missed,” his parents said in a statement.

Supplied image of Ryley Ziebell, e-bike crash victim
Ryley Ziebell died after his e-bike and a 4WD collided in Melbourne on Monday night. (HANDOUT/QUEENSLAND POLICE)

The vehicle’s driver, a 22-year-old from Eltham North, is assisting police as officers investigate the accident.

On Sunday, a 33-year-old Queensland woman was taken to hospital with life-threatening injuries after a crashing her e-scooter. 

No other vehicles or other devices were involved.

She died in hospital on Monday.

On December 2, another e-bike rider was killed in a collision with a garbage truck in the inner-Sydney suburb of Ultimo. 

He was not wearing a helmet.

Both Queensland and NSW are considering ways of regulating such devices after a spate of fatalities.

On the Sunshine Coast, a 15-year-old boy was charged over an e-bike crash that killed an eight-year-old boy in October.

NSW premier Chris Minns told 2GB on Tuesday morning that his government was considering measures to halve the maximum power of e-bikes, from 500 to 250 watts.

The state opposition has promised a registration system for children, food delivery riders and share-bike users if elected in 2027.

The Queensland government, which is holding a parliamentary inquiry into e-mobility safety, is also considering registration.

E-BIKE STOCK
The boy’s death is the latest in a spate of fatal e-bike crashes across Australia. (Bianca De Marchi/AAP PHOTOS)

On Tuesday, the Victorian Automotive Chamber of Commerce (VACC) criticised the state government’s decision to reject a coroner’s recommendation for e-bike registration. 

In July 2025, Coroner Audrey Jamieson recommended the government consider ways to identify non-compliant e-bikes, including a registration scheme, following her investigation into the death of Nitin Haldipur Prabhu.

However, in formal responses to the Coroners Court, both Victoria Police and the Department of Transport and Planning (DTP) rejected registration as an option.

In her response, DTP acting executive director Fiona Green said registration was not being considered because it “would be costly and may be a major disincentive to riding”.

VACC CEO Peter Jones on Tuesday said the decision showed a concerning reluctance to act on a coroner’s safety recommendation.

“Victoria has always led the nation on road safety initiatives. We shouldn’t be waiting for other states when we have a clear recommendation from a coroner,” he said.

The chamber’s research partnership with Monash University recently documented the scope of non-compliant e-bike use in central Melbourne.

Most of the 27,000 e-bikes observed did not use pedals, indicating they were throttle-powered or illegally modified, according to the research.

It urged authorities to look at the legal definition of e-bikes, enforce existing road rules for non-compliant devices, and close import loopholes.

WeRide, a group representing bicycle and e-bike companies, said leadership from the federal government was needed to ensure e-bikes entering Australia met local standards.

AAP