In a bid to cut costs while maintaining acceptable levels of customer service, airports are increasingly adopting automation for repetitive tasks involving security and access control.

Every day in airports across the world, countless employees are tasked with sitting at entry/exit doors, scanning boarding passes and other tasks.

These duties can be easily and effectively automated through electronics, according to a new report entitled The World Market for Pedestrian Entrance Control Equipment from HIS.

“Automation at airports represents a huge opportunity for suppliers of pedestrian entrance control equipment, particularly those that specialise in speed gates,” says Omar Talpur, security, fire and access control analyst at IHS. “The first process that everyone thinks about—and the area where there has probably been the most progress – is boarding control.

“In most airports around the world, employees are tasked with scanning individual boarding passes while passengers idly wait,” Talpur observs.

“Automated boarding control provides airports with an opportunity to speed up the boarding process by deploying two to three speed gates in the boarding area to automate this process. In an industry where on-time departures are essential, any acceleration in boarding could potentially save millions of dollars each year.”

But if automation delivers so many advantages, why haven’t frequent flyers seen it deployed on a wider scale?
The answer to this question lies in a number of factors that are inhibiting adoption.

“The airport environment is complex, and in most instances it takes years of planning and construction to roll out a solution that offers such radical changes,” Talpur says. “Automated boarding control won’t happen overnight. However, a snowball effect is inevitable as passengers and airport personnel become accustomed to working with the technology.”

To date, automated boarding control gates have been more prevalent in Europe than the US.

“Many of Europe’s airports operate as for-profit businesses and are thus incentivized to cut costs and improve the traveller experience to keep passengers travelling and spending money in the airport,” Talpur notes.

“Furthermore, in the United States, government agencies such as the Transportation Security Administration and the US Customs and Border Protection play a significant role in airport safety and security. New technologies are required to go through rigorous processes and approvals before deployment, which creates hurdles for suppliers looking to sell product into US airports.”

Pedestrian entrance control manufacturers that are not prepared with products that can serve this industry will have a steep hill to climb should they look to pursue opportunities within airports in the future. Being first to market with an approved, reliable product will be critical to success.