Skip to main content

Sensys to enforce new Asian market

Sensys Traffic is to supply speed enforcement systems worth US$292,000 to a new market in Asia. The equipment will be specially adapted for the local market and will be delivered during the current year. "This pilot order comes from a new market for Sensys in Asia, with considerable future potential. We look forward to being able to demonstrate a product that is specifically adapted to this market," says Johan Frilund, CEO of Sensys Traffic.
July 8, 2013 Read time: 1 min
569 Sensys Traffic is to supply speed enforcement systems worth US$292,000 to a new market in Asia.

The equipment will be specially adapted for the local market and will be delivered during the current year.

"This pilot order comes from a new market for Sensys in Asia, with considerable future potential. We look forward to being able to demonstrate a product that is specifically adapted to this market," says Johan Frilund, CEO of Sensys Traffic.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Pioneering sensors collect weather data from moving vehicles
    January 20, 2012
    ITS International contributing editor David Crawford foresees the vehicle as 'sentinel being'
  • TransCore and Sensys Networks partner on real time travel data
    June 18, 2013
    TransCore, provider of intelligent transportation system (ITS) products and services to fifty US state departments of transportation, and California-based Sensys Networks are to integrate the Sensys arterial travel time system into TransCore’s TransSuite advanced traffic management system, used by more than forty state and local governments. The Sensys Networks arterial travel time system employs signature re-identification technology to measure and report real-time travel data along a city corridor. This i
  • Managed motorways, hard shoulder running aids safety, saves time
    January 30, 2012
    The announcement that, in 2012/13, work to extend Managed Motorways to Junctions 5-8 of the M6 near Birmingham in the West Midlands is scheduled to start marks the next step for the UK's hard shoulder running concept, first introduced on the M42 in 2006. The M6 scheme is in fact one of several announced; over the next few years work will start on applying Managed Motorways to various sections of the M1, M25 London Orbital, M60 and M62. According to Paul Unwin, senior project manager with the Highways Agency
  • Flexible, demand-based parking charges ease parking problems
    April 10, 2012
    Innovative parking initiatives on the US Pacific Coast. David Crawford reviews. Californian cities are leading the way in trialling new solutions to their endemic parking problems. According to Donald Shoup, a professor of urban planning at the University of California in Los Angeles, drivers looking for available spots can cause up to 74% of traffic congestion in downtown areas. One solution is variable, demand-responsive pricing of parking.