Egged
All city buses in Eilat and Kiryat Shmona will be replaced with electric buses
Egged and Transport Ministry will convert two more cities to zero-emission public transport by end-2026. By year-end, Egged will operate 900 electric buses in Israel, including 200 intercity buses.
Data centers take center stage as Keystone Infra posts solid Q1 2026
All city buses in Eilat, Kiryat Shmona to be replaced with electric ones by end of 2026
Purim Shpiel: Declassified docs.: Israel’s bus drivers have been trained by Mossad since 1949
In at the back door
Entering buses at all doors, not only at the front, will speed up boarding and improve the efficiency of public transport.
Lower fares hit the road (and are on track)
Public transportation reform means cheaper travel and flexible options.
Lowered bus, train pricing expected to change the face of public transport in Israel
A massive pricing reform is planned for much of the nation's public transport system as of January 1.
Environment Ministry: Dan and Egged causing most pollution in heavy vehicle sector
The ministry drew its conclusions after examining the 2014 emissions of the heavy vehicle companies across the nation.
Debate on lack of Sabbath, holiday transportation goes into high gear
Transportation Minister Katz calls public transport activists leftists, hypocrites.
Israeli public transit infrastructure lags behind OECD countries
While Jerusalem and Haifa have both recently received positive updates to their transit systems, Tel Aviv still has not upgraded its mass transit system.
Egged Taavura bus driver strikes leave passengers stranded around the country
Toward the formulation of a new collective agreement, the Egged Taavura workers committee had submitted a list containing more than 60 demands to the company's management.
Smoking at an Israeli wedding
Egged bus strike averted in late-night deal
Despite pursuit to reduce expenditures by NIS 100 million, bus company agrees to suspend plans to fire employees in favor of averting strike.
UTJ asks Election C'tee to ban Kadima ad campaign
Party says campaign, that bears the slogan “350 shekels for soldiers, 3,400 shekels for yeshiva students,” is "patently false."