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.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Qualcomm Technologies acquires Autotalks
    June 5, 2025
    Founded in 2008, Autotalks pioneered industry’s first purpose-built V2X chipset
  • Bristol’s buses trial CycleEye detection system
    July 7, 2017
    Fusion Processing’s Jim Hutchinson looks at a two-year trial of the company’s cyclist detection system. Is cycling in a city dangerous? Well, that depends where you are and how you view statistics. Malmö is far more bike-friendly than Mumbai and the risk can either be perceived as small - one death per 29 million miles cycled in the UK in 2013 - or large - that equated to 109 deaths in the same year. Whatever your personal take on the data, the effect of these accidents can be felt indirectly too. News of c
  • Drover AI’s Alex Nesic: ‘We’re still in the basement level of micromobility’
    April 12, 2022
    The micromobility revolution has reshaped the way we get around cities, but it has created some problems too. Drover AI’s PathPilot is here to help cities – and pedestrians – Alex Nesic tells Adam Hill
  • Australia’s RMS orders Q-Free on board units
    April 24, 2013
    Q-Free’s Australian subsidiary, Q-Free Australia, has been awarded an order valued at US$2.9 million for on board units (OBU) by the Roads and Maritime Services (RMS) in Australia. Q-Free Australia, based in Sydney, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Q-Free ASA, operating in Australia for over ten years to implement and deliver new road user charging projects and to manage the ongoing service, maintenance and upgrade activities of existing installations. Q-Free Australia has been working with Roads and Maritim