Skip to main content

Dubai Police orders more Sensys systems

Sensys Traffic has received an order valued at US$846,000 for traffic safety systems from Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Sensys has its largest installed base, apart from Sweden, in the United Arab Emirates and has been supplying the Dubai police since 2001; this order expands the number of their traffic safety systems.
June 11, 2015 Read time: 1 min

569 Sensys Traffic has received an order valued at US$846,000 for traffic safety systems from Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

Sensys has its largest installed base, apart from Sweden, in the United Arab Emirates and has been supplying the Dubai police since 2001; this order expands the number of their traffic safety systems.

”We continue to reap success in the Middle East. This order from the Dubai police is the result of a long period of marketing together with our new partners in the Emirates. The order is also confirmation that we are at the cutting edge of technology,” says Torbjörn Sandberg, CEO at Sensys.

Related Content

  • March 24, 2014
    Sensys notches up sales success
    Swedish-headquartered Sensys Traffic is looking forward to a very successful Intertraffic event. On the basis that success breeds success, in just the last few weeks alone, the company has notched up important sales. Sensys has received sub-orders worth over €9.5 million from the Swedish Transport Administration to supply measurement systems and measurement cabinets for traffic safety cameras for the Swedish ATC system, with indications of further business volume in the forthcoming years. Earlier this month
  • March 8, 2013
    Further enforcement order for Sensys
    Sensys America, US partner of Swedish supplier of enforcement systems, Sensys Traffic, has received an order worth US$630,000 for speed and red light enforcement to be supplied under a framework agreement to Washington DC. This is the second call-off order from the framework agreement signed in October 2012. Delivery is estimated to be made in the second quarter 2013. "This is a follow-up of the order we obtained in December 2012 further to the equipment being installed and approved by the end-customer in
  • October 18, 2016
    Sharjah Police record 500 per cent increase in heavy vehicle traffic violations
    The Traffic and Patrol Department of Sharjah Police has successfully increased road safety since the beginning of last year by utilising technologies new to the United Arab Emirates, designed to manage truck and heavy vehicle movements in the emirate - the highlight of their recent submission in to the Gulf Traffic Awards taking place at the Dubai World Trade Centre on 13-15 November. Issues with heavy vehicles passing through the city without permits and other restricted zones have been a recurring pro
  • November 4, 2014
    Swedish Transport Administration expands Sensys partnership
    The Swedish Transport Administration has placed an order with Sensys Traffic, as part of their 2013 agreement, for automatic traffic safety control (ATC) systems. The US$12.5 million order is for the continued replacement of existing ATC systems and the installation of new ATC stations in 2015. "Business with the Swedish Transport Administration has gone very well since starting up in July 2013," says Sensys CEO Johan Frilund. "As our service organisation has grown, our relationship with the Administrati