On the occasion of the official launch of the project, the editorial team of EurekaBike interviewed the key figures of Enovia and Enyring, who have partnered to revolutionize the very foundations of the light urban mobility paradigm. A new concept of eBike usage is taking shape between Berlin and Amsterdam.
Yamaha and the new key concepts of "battery swap" and "IoT platform"
The Enyring initiative was born from the innovative drive of Yamaha Motor and has an ambitious goal: to replace the way eBike owners "refuel" their electric bicycle.
The core idea is to completely eliminate the need for home charging by introducing the concept of "battery swap"—an instant, accessible operation fully integrated into a digital ecosystem. It involves simply dropping off the depleted battery at a designated station and retrieving a fully charged one in seconds.
Alongside the German-Japanese team is e-Novia, a fully Italian deep tech company specialized in integrating the physical and digital worlds. It has built the technology platform on which the entire service is based.
The e-Novia platform that manages smart batteries
The entire system revolves around the smart battery developed by Enyring, and e-Novia, with its more than ten years of experience in the field of vehicle connectivity, has developed the platform that manages all functionalities related to this highly innovative component.
The Enyring smart battery is not just a hardware component—it is the intelligent core of the vehicle. It communicates in real-time with the ecosystem, collects data, manages permissions and authorizations, and enables predictive functions through connectivity and artificial intelligence.
The system records all charging and discharging data, user transactions, and usage metrics, continuously processing this information to constantly improve the user experience for urban cyclists.
Artificial intelligence helps to optimize battery performance at battery swap stations and also regulates battery assignment, ensuring each user receives the most suitable battery at the right time. Naturally, all sensitive data is processed in compliance with European regulations, using technological and functional protocols designed to guarantee security and privacy.
A new concept of ownership and security thanks to the smart battery
Another distinctive element of the Enyring system is the integrated vehicle and battery management model. Enyring is not just a platform for swapping empty batteries with charged ones: through the battery, users can also lock or unlock their bike, preventing unauthorized use. The battery thus acts as a true digital key, taking the concept of eBike ownership and security to a whole new level. This is made possible by the IoT architecture that allows real-time communication between the components of the vehicle-battery system.
When and where Enyring will be available
The commercial launch of Enyring is scheduled for autumn 2025, once current certifications are completed. The first eBike models will carry the Enyring brand; Yamaha will remain "behind the scenes" as a technology provider and will not play a communication role. In other words, we won’t see Yamaha-branded bikes or motors dedicated to the Enyring infrastructure—vehicles, batteries, and charging stations will all bear the Enyring brand.
For now, the battery swap system will be reserved exclusively for proprietary Enyring-branded bikes, while the team assesses market readiness and conditions for potentially opening this system to other brands interested in joining this innovative infrastructure.
Goal: a modular future
Although the current focus is on expanding the service in Berlin and Amsterdam, the Enyring team is already looking ahead. The stated goal is to become the leading European platform for battery swapping in the eBike sector. In this vision, expanding toward a multi-brand logic is seen as a real option, especially to foster large-scale adoption and build an interoperable network of compatible models.
Bottle battery for an even more practical energy reserve?
The idea of developing more compact batteries—perhaps similar in shape to a 500 ml bottle, ideal for light urban use—has been considered as a possible future evolution. However, for now, Enyring remains focused on its core business: producing 480Wh and 48V batteries designed to provide range, stability, and compatibility with Enyring eBike models to be released within the year.
Deep tech and AI: a vision that drives innovation
The entire project is guided by a philosophy rooted in the integration of deep technology and AI. As the e-Novia team explains, it's about the fusion of artificial intelligence, advanced sensors, and integrated systems, directly applied to physical objects. It's not just about "adding technology" to a product: it's about rethinking the very nature of the product and its relationship with the environment.
In the world of light mobility, this revolution means smart, connected, and adaptive eBikes, capable of learning from user behavior and reacting dynamically. This vision is nourished as much by internally developed technologies as by technology transfers from related sectors, such as robotics, industrial automation, or autonomous vehicles. And the real evolutionary leap? It will be the full integration of smart hardware and predictive software, capable of generating not only better products but entire adaptive ecosystems.
The smart bike that learns and adapts
According to e-Novia, the evolution of urban electric mobility will not be driven by bigger batteries or more powerful motors. The real leap will come when bicycles are able to learn.
Thanks to the Physical AI approach, the eBikes of the future—like the ones currently being developed by e-Novia and Enyring—will not just be connected: they will be intelligent, able to gather data during use, interpret it, and improve their behavior over time.
Imagine a bike that recognizes your riding habits, autonomously optimizes energy consumption based on the route, adapts motor assistance depending on the terrain or traffic conditions. Or one that, in urban settings, adjusts its power to ensure maximum safety near pedestrian crossings or busy intersections.
This context-aware intelligence is the result of synergy between advanced sensors, predictive algorithms, and real-time connectivity. A bike that not only responds to its environment but actively interacts with it, offering a personalized, efficient, and increasingly safe experience.
Smart mobility is already here
Enyring is not just designing new batteries and bikes—with its tech partner e-Novia, it is building a new language between users and vehicles. A language made of data, adaptation, prediction, and safety. The bike, once a passive object, becomes a smart system that evolves over time, alongside its rider and the environment it moves in.
With this vision, the challenge is not just to eliminate charging limitations, but to redefine the entire urban two-wheel experience. And everything suggests that battery swapping is only the first step toward truly integrated, personalized, and sustainable mobility.