The San Francisco Bicycle Coalition weighed in with a pointed response, arguing that the state should be making it easier, not harder, to own and use e-bikes. Their senior organizer echoed the sentiment shared by many riders: the real confusion and danger comes from people not being able to tell the difference between a legal e-bike and an electric moped, not from the bikes themselves.
Brett Thurber, co-owner of a San Francisco e-bike shop, raised a practical industry concern about AB 1557. Restricting California’s speed limits below what manufacturers currently build for the U.S. market could push companies to skip California customers entirely, shrinking the supply available to local shops and consumers.


I thought you’re gonna say 50kmph easily with a twist of a throttle but alas, it’s only 30kmph, which can be achieved easily for a period of time by an average cyclist on a roadbike.
But i do agree ebike that can do more than 30kmph with a throttle are a danger to the pedestrians, it’s already a moped, which is something people doesn’t seems to realise.