RFID has the potential to dramatically streamline and improve airline baggage handling
Europe and Asia will lead the RFID charge, say analysts

RFID baggage tracking cleared for take-off

Dinner in London, breakfast in New York, luggage in the Congo

Written by Robert Jaques

Radio frequency identification (RFID) has the potential to dramatically streamline and improve airline baggage handling, industry experts predicted today.

Figures from ABI Research suggest that RFID airline baggage tagging will clock up $11.8m in sales this year, growing to almost $27.5m in 2011.

"One of the barriers to adoption of RFID for airline baggage tagging has been the tag price. Because the tags must be disposable, they must be cheap," said ABI Research analyst Robert Foppiani.

The majority of baggage handling in the US is the domain of the airlines themselves. In contrast, overseas airport operators tend to provide unified baggage handling systems for all the airlines they serve.

This has led to problems over whether airlines or airports should be responsible for RFID investment.

Another obstacle, according to ABI, is the legacy barcode tracking infrastructure used by airlines around the world. While less flexible than RFID, it is "well entrenched and works most of the time".

However, the analyst firm noted that RFID trials exist or are planned in a number of cities, including Hong Kong, Las Vegas, Narita and Qatar.

Air France-KLM is conducting a joint trial at Charles de Gaulle in Paris and Schiphol in Amsterdam, and South Korean carrier Asiana Airlines has run a domestic six-city pilot.

Tags and readers from Symbol Technologies are being used in the majority of these trials, along with RFID chips from Impinj.

Foppiani predicts that specific country markets within Europe and Asia will lead the charge.

"Asia's less efficient barcode systems are ripe for replacement, and Europe has many transit hubs catering to large numbers of inter-flight transfers," he said.

See also:

reader comments

related articles

 

Heathrow pilots RFID bags

Airline joins forces with BAA to carry out six-month trial 21 Feb 2008

Brown meets rebel Heathrow MPs

Prime minister meets backbench MPs in attempt to address concerns over potential impact of Heathrow expansion on government's green credentials 12 Nov 2008

EU travellers losing 3,300 laptops a week

European airports a hub for lost notebooks 31 Jul 2008

latest news

Ballmer highlights aims for New Year

Ballmer announces Windows 7 beta and future alliances designed to improve information sharing 08 Jan 2009

Active Storage completes UK Jigsaw

Jigsaw unveiled as Raid vendor's first non-US Platinum partner as it launches in Europe 08 Jan 2009

Dell quits Irish production

Vendor to slash 1,900 jobs in Limerick as it migrates assembly for EMEA customers to Poland 08 Jan 2009

poll

Challenging times ahead?

Challenging times ahead?

Do you think there will be a lot of channel job cuts in 2009?

Previous poll results

Paul Anderson, Trend Micro

Vendor Q&A: Paul Anderson, Trend Micro

During this Q&A session Paul Anderson, UK country manager of Trend Micro talks about the changing threat landscape and how Trend is working with resellers in 2009

Sara Yirrell and Rick Wallis

Vendor Q&A: Rick Wallis, NEC Computers

In this exclusive vendor Q&A, Rick Wallis, UK sales director at NEC Computers talks to CRN editor Sara Yirrell about his firm’s plans for the channel.

events

Channel Expo 2009 logo

Channel Expo 2009

The UK's top reseller exhibition will return to the NEC on 20 May 2009

CRN Fight Night 2009

The channel's only white-collar boxing event is back

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

Primary Navigation