Inside Amadeus' Vision for Biometrics at Airports
14.03.2024 - 12:35
/ skift.com
/ Justin Dawes
Amadeus envisions a future where its facial-recognition technology could be used throughout a passenger’s journey at the airport: check-in, bag drop and tracking, boarding, border control, and more.
That would allow pre-verified passengers to more freely flow through corridors without needing people to manually check documents.
Making that a reality was a key factor behind the company’s move to acquire Vision-Box for $348 million.
The company needs to be able to deploy tech at border control checkpoints. Amadeus already has biometrics tech deployed in some airport lobbies and boarding gates, but the tech needs to cover the full air travel journey in order to be seamless.
“We were missing one thing at the airport, and that was border control,” said Decius Valmorbida, president of travel for Amadeus, during a press event on Wednesday. “If [the Vision-Box acquisition] goes through, we’re going to be able to offer end-to-end possibility for an airport in terms of processing of the passenger.”
Vision-Box technology powers 33% of the planet’s “e-gates” in airports, he said.
Air travel may be getting the most focus now, but Amadeus could sell biometrics tech to other clients as well, like hotels.
“I think that’s where we enter into the future of what we believe in terms of ecosystem and biometrics,” Valmorbida said. “I gave an air example, but I think we can move those examples into other customer verticals. So I think that’s our ambition.”
Amadeus provided details about Vision-Box along with results from an Amadeus survey that covers plans for various digital transformations across travel sectors, including biometrics.
Amadeus interviewed more than 1,200 travel technology “decision makers” at companies in 10 countries: The U.S., UK, France, Germany, UAE, Mexico, Brazil, India, China, and South Korea.
Half of airports surveyed and a third of airlines plan to implement biometrics in the next 12 months. And 60% of airports said they plan to install biometrics fully throughout the airport in the next five years, including for check-in, bag-drop, lounges, and boarding.
The survey also found that 98% of airlines have implemented or plan to implement biometrics at their airport stations.
Meanwhile, biometric tech companies and their clients will have to deal with ongoing concerns and legal hurdles involving data privacy.
The greater survey by Amadeus signals what it says is an industry-wide tech transformation under way.
The survey found that plans for investment in 2024 are 14% higher than the year prior, and 91% of travel companies expect “moderate to aggressive” increases in tech investment this year.
Below are a few sector-specific highlights: