Bosch to support Trash Free Trails, will deliver ‘State of our Trails’ study

Bosch eBike Systems supports Trash Free Trails to deliver groundbreaking ‘State of Our Trails’ Baseline Study

  • Bosch eBike Systems will support the non-profit environmental organisation Trash Free Trails for the remainder of 2020 and into 2021
  • The collaboration will facilitate the organisation’s ‘State of Our Trails’ Baseline Study, expected to be released in June 2021 ahead of a comprehensive report in November 2022
  • Working with brands in the mountain bike industry, Trash Free Trails aims to reduce plastic pollution in wild spaces by 75% before 2025

Bosch eBike Systems is excited to announce its collaboration with the not-for-profit environmental organisation, Trash Free Trails. The alliance will see Bosch support the publication of Trash Free Trails’ State of Our Trails Baseline Study – the first stage of an academic research project conducted in association with Bangor University that will investigate the impact and prevalence of plastic pollution on the UK’s mountain bike trails.

Trash Free Trails, Ashton Court, Bristol

The State of Our Trails Study is the first ever peer-reviewed paper of its kind and aims to shed light on the environmental condition of trails across the country while identifying effective future measures to combat plastic pollution. Alongside financial support, Bosch intends to provide a fleet of Bosch-powered electric mountain bikes in collaboration with existing partner Trek, to aid data collection throughout the research project.

The study’s findings will be published on 5th June 2021 to coincide with World Environment Day, ahead of a comprehensive report – expected to be later released in November 2022. The project will contribute significantly to the group’s mission to drastically reduce the volume of plastic pollution in the UK’s wild spaces by 75% before 2025, providing an ‘action plan’ for change. Bosch’s support today brings the group a step closer to that goal, bolstering the organisation’s valuable research and community focussed environmental activities. 

Trash Free Trails, Ashton Court, Bristol

Tamara Winograd, Director of Marketing and Communications at Bosch eBike Systems, said: “We are very excited to be working with Trash Free Trails. We feel a responsibility to protect the trails that our riders enjoy, and to engage with the mountain biking community to make positive changes together. Supporting Trash Free Trails’ valuable work is a very important part of that and we are thoroughly looking forward to the publication of the report.”

Dom Ferris, Co-director and Founder of Trash Free Trails, said: “It is clear to those of us who ride, run and roam that our trails and wild places are becoming ever more choked with litter – single-use plastic in particular. But can we back this instinctive, anecdotal knowledge up scientifically? No, not yet. This is why we are so proud to be working with Bosch eBike Systems alongside academics at Bangor University to begin work on our groundbreaking State of Our Trails Baseline Study.”

  1. We have a trail called Garbage. It was named years ago(apparently) then cleaned up. The 70+ trails here have no garbage, that I’ve seen. The trail right next to Garbage is called Recycle.