Skip to main content

New CEO for Swarco

Austrian-based traffic technology group Swarco has appointed Cees de Wijs as its new Chief Executive Officer. De Wijs, who has almost 20 years of experience in traffic and transport telematics across all transport modes, will take up his new position on 1 January. De Wijs, aged 45, is a Dutch national and holds a PhD degree in engineering from Delft University of Technology. He previously worked for Royal KPN Group and Logica where he was transport and logistics group director, responsible for the comp
December 17, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
Austrian-based traffic technology group 129 Swarco has appointed Cees de Wijs as its new Chief Executive Officer.  De Wijs, who has almost 20 years of experience in traffic and transport telematics across all transport modes, will take up his new position on 1 January.

De Wijs, aged 45, is a Dutch national and holds a PhD degree in engineering from Delft University of Technology.  He previously worked for Royal KPN Group and Logica where he was transport and logistics group director, responsible for the company’s international intelligent transport systems business, including road pricing, vehicle telematics, logistic tracking and tracing and traffic management and the company’s Austrian road pricing projects. He also spent two years in Sweden working on the traffic management, signalling and toll system design for the Øresund Link.

From March 2010 de Wijs worked for 4186 Xerox, where he was a member of the senior leadership council of Xerox Corporation and member of the board of Xerox Services global transportation and government business, including road pricing, electronic ticketing and fare collection, speed and red light enforcement and parking services.

Manfred Swarovski, Swarco founder and president of the Executive Board: “I am happy to have found in Cees de Wijs a young, yet experienced manager in our industry who is well prepared to tackle the challenges in modern traffic management in an increasingly mobile and interconnected world. I am convinced that his winning personality will help to further develop Swarco’s growth and leading positions in the world of traffic.”

Cees de Wijs, who is also a member of the Supervisory Board of 374 Ertico, comments on his new role: “I have come across the people and technologies of Swarco many times and have great respect for what Manfred Swarovski and his team have created over the past four and a half decades. It is an honour for me to take the lead in a traffic technology solution provider that has one of the most comprehensive products and systems portfolios in innovative road safety and traffic management.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Sensys Gatso Group reorganises
    August 21, 2015
    Following the acquisition of Gatso, the Sensys Gatso Group has announced its new organisational structure, with the creation of two separate business units: The Systems business unit comprises the whole systems organisation, consisting mainly of the existing operations in Sweden and the Netherlands as well as the sales offices in Germany, Singapore and the United Arab Emirates. The unit will be headed by Göran Löfqvist, who has worked for Sensys for 15 years, as executive vice president Systems The Ma
  • Swarco’s smart and safety messages for Melbourne
    October 11, 2016
    For the first time at an ITS World Congress in Australia, Swarco is here presenting its capabilities in road safety and intelligent traffic management solutions. An obvious feature of the stand is the company’s brilliant energy-efficient LED-based variable message signs. Adaptive traffic control and smart mobility software platforms are also on display.
  • Growth of telematics-based pay as you drive car insurance systems
    July 17, 2012
    Car insurance made cheaper by telematics has returned to news headlines in the UK this year. Will it really take off this time and can vehicle tracking provide an effective tool for enforcing or encouraging insurance compliance? Jon Masters reports Will 2012 go down as the year that telematics-based car insurance took off? In the UK at least, a groundswell of new policies, with premiums priced on the basis of tracked and analysed driving style, suggests a turning point has been reached. Some would argue t
  • European progress on road deaths 'disappointing', says ETSC
    June 18, 2020
    Safety body suggests that the EU will miss its target of halving fatalities by 2020