Skip to main content

GMV brings Spain’s regional public transport together

Spanish government plans to bring better connectivity to the country’s rural areas
By David Arminas July 25, 2024 Read time: 3 mins
GMV will supply central management systems for intercity public transportation (image: GMV)

GMV will supply central management systems for intercity public transportation in Spain’s autonomous regions of Castilla y León, Castilla-La Mancha, Murcia and Aragón.

The company said that systems will make it possible to integrate all public transportation information and manage the necessary services for the general public, the government and operators.

GMV says its work in ITS and its multiplatform ITS Suite have earned it contracts worth more than €16 million for the development and launch of the new systems in the Spanish regions - as well as for the renewal of its contract with the government of Galicia.

The contracts are part of the Spanish government’s plans to bring better connectivity to the country’s rural areas where many elderly people live. To ensure mobility is sustainable, policies and actions must guarantee universal accessibility to basic services, promoting efficient public transportation alternatives adapted to people’s needs.

Regional intercity transportation systems in Spain have a high number of routes with low occupancy levels and loss-making operations that connect sparsely populated towns with the main urban centres. As part of the government’s Component 6 of the Recovery, Transformation, and Resilience Plan - one of the national plans drafted by the 27 Member States of the European Union to join the European recovery plan NextGenerationEU -  several measures and investments have been included to modernise, digitalise and enhance security and sustainability for key intercity and intermodal transportation infrastructure throughout Spain.

In 2023 several autonomous regions tendered the supply and implementation of a central ITS management system to integrate all the intercity public transport information from the different concessions that make up the corresponding concession maps. The tender included the management of all the services for the general public, government agencies and operators that will be developed using this information.

GMV’s ITS Suite, a public transportation management and passenger information platform, provides access to a range of ITS applications. These include computer-assisted dispatch and passenger information systems, planning and scheduling, real-time regulation and control, ticketing, eco-driving, security and business intelligence.

In addition to these contracts for new regional systems, GMV also recently won the contract for continuing Galicia’s computer-assisted dispatch (CAD) system, which the company set up in 2015. It covers the region’s entire transportation management system, integrating information from 127 concessions and more than 3,500 vehicles from the various road transportation operators with their CADs.

In 2022, GMV also upgraded the multi-fleet CAD system for Barcelona area’s Metropolitan Transport Authority, a system that GMV set up in 2021.

More than 400 transportation operators in 100 cities in the US, Spain, Malaysia, Poland, Morocco, Sweden and Mexico use GMV’s ITS systems.

GMV is a privately owned global technology business group founded in 1984. Apart from ITS, it works in the sectors of space, aeronautics, defense and security, cybersecurity, automotive, healthcare and telecoms.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Impact of speed limits in Barcelona
    January 20, 2012
    When Barcelona imposed an 80km/h (50mph), the result was significant in environmental, accident, fatality and injury terms. The 80km/h speed limit had the same positive environmental effect as if 22,100 cars were eliminated from the roads in the metropolitan area. Moreover, a reduction in the consumption of fuel by more than 24,000 tonnes per year was also achieved, while accidents, fatalities and injuries also showed substantial improvement.
  • US favours express buses are for intercity travel
    November 26, 2013
    David Crawford records an upsurge in ground travel. Express buses are powering ahead of air and rail as the US’ most-favoured form of intercity travel and major operators are investing in passenger-attracting and retaining technologies. At the same time ‘kayak’-style price comparison websites are emerging to widen rider choice. Modelled on airline industry search engines that find cheap flight deals by comparing carriers’ offers, these new websites aim to fill the same gap for a ground-travel equivalent
  • East Africa uses cargo tracking to foils criminals and collect tax
    June 10, 2015
    Shem Oirere looks at the beneficial effect of cargo tracking. The mandatory installation of electronic cargo tracking and security (ECTS) systems in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda has helped enhance revenue collection, enforce cargo handling requirements, improved the business environment of the respective countries’ trade routes and helped cargo hauliers cut costs. This is being spearheaded by the state-owned tax collection agencies and the improved custom duty collection has not only enabled a reduction of im
  • EU announces finalists in EMW and SUMP awards
    February 7, 2013
    The European Commission has announced the six finalists in two awards focused on raising awareness of and developing sustainable and environmentally-friendly approaches to mobility. The European Mobility Week (EMW) award scheme rewards the local authority deemed to have done the most in raising public awareness of sustainable mobility issues and implementing measures to achieve a shift towards sustainable urban transport. The winning city is chosen by an independent panel of transport experts who assess all