Skip to main content

More Chile scheduling for Optibus

Metropol Group works within Santiago's Metropolitana de Movilidad
By David Arminas May 19, 2025 Read time: 2 mins
Santiago de Chile (© Tifonimages | Dreamstime.com)

The Metropol Group, a public transportation operator in Latin America, has selected Optibus planning, scheduling and electric vehicle management for its bus operations in Santiago.

The Metropol Group operates within Red Metropolitana de Movilidad, the Chilean capital’s public transit system. Metropol will leverage Optibus’ cloud computing and artificial intelligence to improve service efficiency for 700 public buses and the charging strategy for 370 electric buses.

In operation for 26 years, Metropol provides public transportation services across Argentina and Chile for more than 230 million annual passengers. In 2022, it expanded to Santiago, becoming one of the city’s eight public transportation operators. In Santiago, it operates 51 routes and seven terminals, including two electric terminals. Its services support the Red system in transporting 950 million passengers each year.

Optibus’s solutions support efficient management of electric buses, including battery monitoring, charging schedules, mixed fleets (electric and diesel) to reduce emissions. The move will support Santiago’s push to fully electrify their bus fleet by 2040. Its AI-powered optimisation will reduce planning time, improve resource allocation for drivers and vehicles as well as enable rapid, dynamic adjustments based on real-time demand.

The result is more reliable schedules and efficient routes daily passengers across municipalities such as Huechuraba, Renca, Puente Alto and San Bernardo.

The implementation of Optibus strengthens Metropol’s collaboration with the city’s transportation authority, Metropolitan Public Transport Directorate (DTPM), which uses Optibus to plan the city's public bus services. With both entities now using Optibus’ software platform,  public-private coordination will improve significantly. This ensures more synchronised planning for Santiago’s expansive bus network - one of Latin America’s most advanced systems with nearly 7,000 buses, including over 2,500 electric.

“Public transportation networks are complex systems. To run at optimal performance for the benefit of passengers and EV infrastructure, all stakeholders’ activities and plans must be aligned,” said Amos Haggiag, Optibus CEO and co-founder.

Apart from being used by operators Metropol and DTPM, the software is used by Redbus Urbano, a Transdev operation and key operator of the RED network. RBU uses Optibus to manage its electric bus fleet and improve its passenger services. 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Close shave for Brazilian project
    June 12, 2015
    Signing the order to equip a new control room just 45 days before the city hosts a major sporting event is challenging - but some deadlines just cannot be moved. There is nothing like a deadline to concentrate minds and effort as Mitsubishi and the Brazilian city of Belo Horizonte discovered in the run-up to the 2014 World Cup. Although municipal authorities had been considering a new command centre for years, it was the hosting of the World Cup last summer that provided the final impetus.
  • Arup picks 8 ways ITS can save the planet
    January 6, 2022
    The solutions we need to accelerate carbon-free transport are known, available and ready to be deployed. Tim Gammons from Arup explains what the ITS industry can do now to help…
  • California to get electric bus assembly plant
    April 3, 2013
    Chinese electric vehicle (EV) producer BYD is to build an assembly plan in Lancaster, about seventy miles north of Los Angeles, to make electric buses for US and Latin American public transportation markets. The facility will be one of only a few making electric buses in the US, where most buses use diesel fuel or compressed natural gas. Michael Austin, vice president of BYD America, said Lancaster's aggressive embrace of solar energy programs was a factor in deciding to build the plant there. "They've been
  • New mobility services could benefit city dwellers and make public transport more affordable
    November 3, 2017
    New mobility services integrated into mass transit systems could improve the lives of all urban inhabitants and make public transport more affordable, accessible and sustainable, according to research from the Coalition for Urban Transitions (CfUT). It also presents the first global survey of new mobility services, and identifies emerging trends and opportunities for decision-makers in both the public and private sectors.