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Umovity and Tatweer Launch Middle East’s First Adaptive Ramp Metering System, Enabling Multi-Million-Dollar Savings

Business

Umovity and Tatweer Launch Middle East’s First Adaptive Ramp Metering System, Enabling Multi-Million-Dollar Savings
Business

Business

Umovity and Tatweer Launch Middle East’s First Adaptive Ramp Metering System, Enabling Multi-Million-Dollar Savings

2026-05-14 01:02 Last Updated At:01:10

ANAHEIM, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 13, 2026--

Umovity, the joint brand uniting Econolite and PTV Group – together with Tatweer, a leading provider of professional engineering services and innovative smart mobility technologies – have successfully deployed the first adaptive ramp metering system in the Middle East. Installed on Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Street, one of Abu Dhabi’s busiest corridors, the system uses real-time data to regulate traffic entering the highway – reducing congestion, delivering environmental benefits, improving travel reliability, and unlocking estimated savings of up to $2.6 million annually in delay-related costs.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260513478884/en/

The project combines Econolite’s software for real-time local control with ST Engineering’s advanced traffic management software for ramp metering coordination and monitoring, delivered in close collaboration with Tatweer, which led local engineering, system integration, and deployment. The solution is aligned with Abu Dhabi’s broader intelligent transport vision and designed for interoperability with the Emirate’s Intelligent Transport Central Platform (ITCP), leveraging a technology environment in which PTV Group’s software solutions are already widely used for real-time traffic modeling, simulation, and network prediction. This ensures long-term integration and provides a scalable foundation for future expansion across the network.

At critical access points to the highway network, the ramp metering system dynamically regulates the flow of vehicles entering the roadway. By leveraging real-time data from multiple detection technologies - including video, radar, and in-road sensors - the system continuously monitors traffic conditions such as speed, density, and queue lengths. Based on this data, signal timings are automatically adjusted to optimize vehicle entry, preventing bottlenecks before they form and ensuring smoother, more reliable traffic flow along one of Abu Dhabi’s busiest corridors.

For commuters on Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Street, the benefits are immediate: shorter, more predictable journeys, fewer stop-and-go delays, and smoother traffic flow during peak hours. Beyond the time saved, steadier traffic also means lower fuel consumption and reduced vehicle emissions – a direct contribution to Abu Dhabi’s sustainability agenda. By preventing congestion before it builds, the system supports both everyday mobility and long-term environmental goals.

The project’s success was underpinned by close collaboration between Umovity and Tatweer. Umovity contributed its globally deployed ramp metering solution, including Econolite’s field-proven Cobalt controllers and EOS controller software for real-time local control. ST Engineering, a software partner engaged by Tatweer and Umovity, provided advanced traffic management capabilities through its TransCore (TransSuite) platform, enabling coordinated operation and monitoring of the system.

Tatweer led local engineering design, systems integration, field deployment, commissioning, and stakeholder coordination with Abu Dhabi’s Integrated Transport Centre, ensuring the solution was fully aligned with the emirate’s specific requirements. Together, the partners delivered the complete system in just six months-demonstrating how global technology and strong local execution can combine to deliver rapid, real-world impact.

The ramp metering deployment is designed to align with Abu Dhabi’s broader intelligent transport ecosystem, supporting seamless integration with the Intelligent Transport Central Platform (ITCP) and enabling coordinated traffic management across multiple systems and corridors. This ensures the solution can scale effectively as part of the Emirate’s long-term, data-driven mobility strategy.

The Integrated Transport Centre (Abu Dhabi Mobility) is driving this transformation through ITCP, a unified platform that integrates AI, monitoring, prediction, and incident management to enable more proactive and efficient traffic operations across the network.

With this project, Umovity Group, Tatweer, and ST Engineering have set a new benchmark for intelligent traffic management in the region. The Abu Dhabi ramp metering system shows how adaptive, digital solutions can be effectively integrated into a broader smart city ecosystem.

Nicholas Ghia, CEO, Umovity Software, stated that, “This project demonstrates the real strength of Umovity - combining Econolite’s field-proven traffic control technologies with a broader ecosystem of advanced traffic management and analytics capabilities. By delivering a solution that integrates seamlessly into Abu Dhabi’s existing mobility platform, we are enabling measurable impact - reducing congestion, improving travel reliability, and creating long-term value for the city. This is exactly the kind of collaborative, future-ready approach needed to scale intelligent transport systems.”

“This deployment marks a significant milestone in Abu Dhabi’s journey toward intelligent, data-driven mobility. By combining world-class technology with deep regional execution expertise, we have delivered a solution that not only tackles today’s congestion challenges on one of our busiest corridors but also lays the foundation for the emirate’s long-term smart mobility ambitions. Our partnership with Umovity, and close alignment with local stakeholders, demonstrates what is possible when global innovation meets strong local delivery capability,” Dr. Atef Garib, Tatweer CEO, had commented.

As Abu Dhabi continues to invest in innovative mobility strategies, the project provides a scalable blueprint for future deployments, reinforcing the role of technology and collaboration in shaping the future of urban transportation.

About Umovity

Umovity, established through the combination of PTV Group and Econolite, is a globally leading platform for Intelligent Transportation Systems and mobility technology. With uniquely integrated capabilities across software, hardware, and field services, Umovity delivers end-to-end mobility solutions to cities and regions worldwide. Its portfolio includes software for traffic planning, simulation, and real-time traffic management, alongside advanced traffic control hardware such as controllers, cabinets, and sensors, as well as Advanced Traffic Management System (ATMS) software. By uniting these capabilities, Umovity empowers communities to build safer, smarter, and more sustainable mobility systems. For more information, visit www.umovity.com.

About Tatweer

Tatweer is a leading regional firm offering a unique blend of professional engineering services and innovative smart technologies across the transportation, traffic, and road engineering sectors. The company delivers turnkey solutions that bring innovation to every project, drawing on highly qualified, multidisciplinary teams of engineers and technology specialists. With a strong reputation for innovation among key clients across the region, Tatweer specializes in developing advanced, sustainable solutions that address today’s mobility challenges while anticipating the needs and ambitions of tomorrow’s smart cities. For more information, visit www.tatweermea.com.

Sheikh Zayed Ramp Metering System Project, Abu Dhabi, UAE

Sheikh Zayed Ramp Metering System Project, Abu Dhabi, UAE

While John Tortorella has only been coaching the Vegas Golden Knights for a little over six weeks, they are his sixth different NHL team and he is coming up on his 22nd anniversary of hoisting the Stanley Cup.

Through all that, he still wonders something about playoff hockey.

“I’m not sure what’s better: experience or youth, when you have no clue what’s going on?” Tortorella said. “They don’t understand the pressures of it because they don’t know. Or the experience.”

Tortorella's team showed the value of experience, taking a 3-2 series lead over the mostly new-to-this Anaheim Ducks by winning in overtime on Tuesday night. On the flip side, the less-seasoned Buffalo Sabres beat the Canadiens in Montreal to even up their best-of-seven series at 2-2.

Next up are two more chances to test Tortorella's question.

When/Where to Watch: Game 5, Thursday, 7 p.m. EDT (TNT, TruTV)

Series: Tied 2-2

Just when it looked like the Sabres were in trouble, they scored the opening goal less than seven minutes into Game 4 and endured a back-and-forth night full of replay reviews and penalties. Buffalo coach Lindy Ruff wasn't thrilled with some opposing players “going down easy” and wished for more embellishment calls, but he's proud of how his young group handled it.

"We battled through all that," Ruff said Wednesday. “We got to make sure we’re in there but at the same time not taking anything stupid and putting our team at a disadvantage. It’s a fine line right now, but I think there’s a way to juggle around it.”

The Canadiens got a taste of playoff hockey a year ago, losing in five games to Washington in the first round. A few players are left (and Phillip Danault returned) from 2021, when they went on an improbable run to the Stanley Cup Final before falling short against Tampa Bay.

Captain Nick Suzuki, one of those players, chalked up the latest defeat to a bad bounce and already seems ready for Game 5.

“We knew we had to go to Buffalo anyway,” Suzuki said. "We’re a good road team. We've shown that all year, so we've go do it again and bring it back home.”

A few Sabres players have been in the NHL postseason, but the organization is here for the first time since 2011 after ending the longest drought in league history. The newcomers have been some of Buffalo's best players, and it seems like they are enjoying the ride.

“As a kid, this is what you dream of, playing playoff hockey,” said Josh Doan, who leads the team in scoring this series with six points. “There’s nothing you trade it in the world for, getting the opportunity to do this.”

When/Where to Watch: Game 6, Thursday, 9:30 p.m. EDT (TNT, TruTV)

Series: Vegas leads 3-2

Tortorella would love for experience to win out because the Golden Knights are “full of it.” And they know it.

“We’re a pretty comfortable group in there, and there’s a lot of players in there who’ve been through it and had a lot of success and won,” Vegas defenseman Rasmus Andersson said. “We’re an older team, and it’s that feeling that no moment is too big.”

Anaheim has plenty of veteran guys to rely on, including Cup winners Alex Killorn and John Carlson and players like Chris Kreider and Jacob Trouba who have gone on deep runs. But the Ducks' core is about youth, speed and not getting intimidated by the situation.

“I’m pretty excited to see what we all got," 23-year-old center Mason McTavish said. ”It’s our first time with our backs against the wall. I’m excited for us to kind of show everybody what we got."

Coach Joel Quenneville, who has three Cup rings from his time as head coach in Chicago, has been around long enough that Tuesday night reminded him of a similar Game 5 — 11 years ago ... at Anaheim. That was when he was with the Blackhawks, who erased exactly this deficit on the way to their third championship in six years.

“(We have) a lot of younger guys that they’ve been fine the whole playoffs and nothing seems to change their demeanor or their approach,” Quenneville said. “We’ll come back home and focus on the next game and know we’re right in the thick of things."

As for the notion that a young team needs to learn how to lose before it can win, Quenneville quipped, “I’m not ready for that.”

AP Hockey Writer John Wawrow in Buffalo, New York, AP Sports Writer Mark Anderson in Las Vegas and the Canadian Press contributed.

AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/stanley-cup and https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Buffalo Sabres' Zach Benson (6) reacts to a goal by teammate Tage Thompson against Montreal Canadiens goaltender Jakub Dobes (75) during second period, second round, game 4, NHL playoff hockey game in Montreal on Tuesday, May 12, 2026. (Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press via AP)

Buffalo Sabres' Zach Benson (6) reacts to a goal by teammate Tage Thompson against Montreal Canadiens goaltender Jakub Dobes (75) during second period, second round, game 4, NHL playoff hockey game in Montreal on Tuesday, May 12, 2026. (Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press via AP)

Buffalo Sabres' Zach Benson (6) reacts after scoring against Montreal Canadiens goaltender Jakub Dobes (75) during third period, second round, Game 4, NHL playoff hockey action in Montreal on Tuesday, May 12, 2026. (Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press via AP)

Buffalo Sabres' Zach Benson (6) reacts after scoring against Montreal Canadiens goaltender Jakub Dobes (75) during third period, second round, Game 4, NHL playoff hockey action in Montreal on Tuesday, May 12, 2026. (Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press via AP)

Vegas Golden Knights center Tomas Hertl (48) and left wing Brandon Saad (20) celebrate after Hertl's goal against Anaheim Ducks goaltender Lukas Dostal (1) during the third period in Game 5 of a second-round NHL hockey Stanley Cup playoff series Tuesday, May 12, 2026, in Las Vegas. (Steve Marcus

Vegas Golden Knights center Tomas Hertl (48) and left wing Brandon Saad (20) celebrate after Hertl's goal against Anaheim Ducks goaltender Lukas Dostal (1) during the third period in Game 5 of a second-round NHL hockey Stanley Cup playoff series Tuesday, May 12, 2026, in Las Vegas. (Steve Marcus

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