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

  • ITS European Congress ‘a success’
    June 10, 2016
    With 2,000 participants and 958 delegates from 44 countries, the 11th ITS European Congress has been judged a success by its organisers, ERTICO- ITS Europe in partnership with the European Commission. According to Didier Gorteman, director of Congresses at ERTICO-ITS Europe, the organisers received a lot of positive feedback from exhibitors, sponsors and visitors and the success of this event is the result of a great cooperation between ERTICO, the European Commission and our fantastic hosts, Glasgow Cit
  • IBTTA's Pat Jones: 'It’s about expanding people's comfort zone and mine as well'
    October 24, 2024
    For two decades, Pat Jones, has been executive director and CEO of IBTTA. As he approaches retirement at the end of this year, he talks to Adam Hill about a career spent ‘stretching and growing’ – and helping others to do the same
  • Bringing enforcement standards into line
    March 1, 2013
    Difficulties with the apparent accuracy of enforcement systems have been making the headlines in the United States over recent months. Jon Masters investigates the causes and possible cures. Online newspaper reports in the United States over recent months have painted a picture of the authorities struggling to keep on top of their speed and red light enforcement pro­grammes. Among a host of stories put out by the Washington Post and others on the subject of speed cameras during January, there were reports
  • Is GIS modelling the answer to the implications of age?
    January 26, 2012
    Geoff Zeiss of Autodesk talks about the convergence going on between GIS and other software systems which will revolutionise the design and construction of nations' utilities. The issue is that we're getting old. But forget the discovery of body hair in places it never used to be, whether or not to dye, contact lenses versus glasses - in fact, put aside entirely the decision to age gracefully or outrageously; the personal implications pale next to the effects on wider society. Faced with the problem of how