In airports, on roads and across rail networks, security has become a more pressing issue. Making the job harder is the increasingly integrated nature of these transportation modes and overcoming the challenges presented by legacy systems already in place that can only fulfil one specific task.

Frances Penwill-Cook caught up with ARINC business development director for government and physical security Andy Nicholson to find out how his firm is working to provide engineering and integration security systems across all transportation sectors.

Frances Penwill-Cook: How have security needs changed within transportation?

Andy Nicholson: It's not like it used to be 20 years ago when transportation had very clearly defined boundaries on where it ended and where it started.

An amalgamation of infrastructure happened and now you've got underground stations in airports, highways underneath runways and interconnecting airports. As these places have got bigger, so have the risks associated with defining and protecting the perimeter.

ARINC has been around for 80 years and the company has a solid foundation in integration, engineering and communication – these are the three key areas the company has focused on. The security side has become more predominant over the last 50 years and has got more integrated over the last 20. In fact, we installed our first major fully integrated physical security solution 22 years ago.

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“We’re seeing a definite trend towards a digital infrastructure for physical security applications.”

FPC: What do ARINC's sales over the last two years tell you about the trends in transportation security?

AN: We're seeing a definite trend towards a digital infrastructure for physical security applications. In the past cameras have been analogue connected, which creates great restraints on infrastructure configuration.

As more networks become available, digital infrastructure allows us to take one camera and view it in one or 100 positions without affecting the quality of the video stream.

This has allowed airports, railways and highways to distribute management control operational centres relatively simply and create buddy systems, back-up control rooms and extra viewing positions by using a digital network infrastructure.

In the past there would have been numerous separate access control, video surveillance and intercom systems, all of which are manufactured with a very specific communications protocol. In addition, they all had uniquely programmed ideas about how they are going to work and what they are going to do.

ARINC has developed a product, called Advanced Information Management (AIM), which is the glue that brings together all of these legacy systems into one solution. This product is more and more in demand. AIM allows us to create one central graphic user interface, and we have many drivers that talk and interconnect with these third-party products. We are constantly developing and adding to our driver bank.

FPC: What systems are vital to keeping today's airports secure?

AN: We are seeing the increased use of biometrics or body measurement as it's known in Asia. There are fingerprint scanners, iris scanners and hand scanners as well as deep vein and retina scanners. In the future, similar systems will be in place through mobile applications in real time. The needs of border control agencies across the globe are driving this development.

“ARINC’s e-border system offers an advantage, in that it can take a passport and fingerprint reading, then check them live through our system.”

ARINC's e-border system offers an advantage, in that it can take a passport and fingerprint reading, then check them live through our system. This information then goes back to a government agency for verification. This speeds up the delivery process and is what the government and the police see as a major advantage when working remotely.

When airports get a budget for a new terminal, they don't want to replace all of the existing systems but need the latest systems in the newly developed areas – so we customise a solution.

It would be fantastic in this world if every site we went to was greenfield but in the transportation sector the only place you find greenfield is either in the Far East or the Middle East and these are still few and far between.

FPC: What are the greatest challenges the industry is facing?

AN: The greatest challenge is the economic climate and making the investment in solid infrastructure. Clients need systems that are reliable, resilient, scalable and flexible for the future – and that requires a certain level of investment.

Very few of our competitors focus on resiliency and what that means is that in the physical security world, we have a system, which always requires a standby system. So if one of the systems fails, we're mirroring and duplicating to a secondary system all the time.