In the city of Bologna, Italy, locals and visitors alike can trade in acts of green kindness for a free pint of beer, gelato or night at the movies.
It’s a green scheme aimed at incentivizing people to ditch their cars and walk, cycle or take public transit instead.
Set up by urban planner Marco Amadori last year, the program is powered by the app BetterPoints, which allows users to log their sustainable journeys and earn points, as reported by BBC News on Wednesday, Oct. 24. The GPS tracker makes sure that people can’t cheat.
In exchange for helping the environment, users can redeem their points at partner shops, restaurants and cafés for things like free beer, ice cream or cinema tickets. More than 100 local businesses signed up for the program.
Dubbed “Bella Mossa” which means “good job” in Italian, the program was funded by the European Union and the city of Bologna and recently ended its six-month run which began on April 1.
Users earn points based on the number of trips taken — the maximum is four a day — not the distance traveled. To earn a free ice cream, for instance, requires earning 3,000 points, or about eight single journeys.
Last year, the program registered the equivalent of 3.7 million kilometers of sustainable journeys and 16,000 reward vouchers were claimed. KM
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