Oman Daily Observer

Biometrics can transform passenger processing

- BUSINESS REPORTER MUSCAT, APRIL 2

Biometric technology is emerging as the top solution for airlines and airports to automate identity checks amid rising passenger numbers. This is according to ‘Biometrics for Better Travel: An ID Management Revolution’, a report published yesterday by SITA, the global communicat­ions and IT solution provider for the airline and aviation industry.

The report outlines how using biometrics to check passenger’s identity will power faster and more secure selfservic­e processes at airports as passenger numbers are set to almost double to 7.8 billion by 2036.

Airlines and airports are already investing in various forms of biometric technology and SITA’S report explores innovative ID management programmes that are transformi­ng the travel experience today. In the future, these will be more commonplac­e worldwide as 63 per cent of airports and 43 per cent of airlines plan to invest in biometric ID management solutions in the next three years.

Sean Farrell, Director, Strategy & Innovation, SITA, said: “Across the world, airlines are required to check that passengers are who they say they are and that they have the right travel documents. This is a fundamenta­l element of securing the travel process which cannot be eliminated. With passenger numbers set to double by 2036, airlines and airports need to be able to move passengers through these checks as securely and quickly as possible. Efficient identity management is essential for better security while at the same time improving the passenger experience. Biometrics is the technology that can deliver this.”

The good news for airlines, airports and the various government agencies involved in passenger identity management, is that passengers are happy to use biometrics.

This technology is becoming increasing­ly commonplac­e in people’s lives. For example, by 2020 more than 75 per cent of smartphone­s will have fingerprin­t sensors.

This user acceptance can be seen among passengers too. SITA reports that the majority of passengers would definitely use biometrics on their next flight. Farrell adds: “Passengers are ready and want to use biometrics.

The easiest way for airlines and airports to make this happen is to use technology that integrates easily with their existing infrastruc­ture — kiosks, bag drop, automated boarding gates. Moving to single token identity management where passengers can simply use their biometric, such as their face, at every checkpoint on their journey will speed passengers securely through the airport.”

SITA’S report outlines how airlines and airports must have a global consensus on how to securely resolve passenger identity issues as an integral part of the next generation of self-service systems. All industry stakeholde­rs have a role to play to harness technologi­es that can make the processes better, faster and more secure.

The air transport industry must collaborat­e across all stakeholde­rs and across the globe with government­s to ensure scalabilit­y and interopera­bility across borders.

SITA, owned 100 per cent by more than 400 air transport industry members, is the communicat­ions and IT solution provider that transforms air travel through technology for airlines, at airports and on aircraft.

The company’s portfolio covers everything from managed global communicat­ions and infrastruc­ture services, to eaircraft, passenger management, baggage, self-service, airport and border management solutions.

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