Skip to main content

Teledyne to acquire Flir for $8bn

The two companies' various camera and sensor products have 'minimal overlap', they insist
By Adam Hill January 6, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
Teledyne and Flir: hitting the road together (© Geargodz | Dreamstime.com)

Teledyne Technologies is to buy Flir Systems in a deal which values Flir at around $8bn.

The companies both make cameras and sensors but insist that their portfolios are complementary.

The sale, which has been given the green light by the boards of both companies, “is expected to close in the middle of 2021” subject to the usual regulatory and shareholder approvals, a joint statement says.

“At the core of both our companies is proprietary sensor technologies,” said Robert Mehrabian, executive chairman of Teledyne.

“Our business models are also similar: we each provide sensors, cameras and sensor systems to our customers."

“However, our technologies and products are uniquely complementary with minimal overlap, having imaging sensors based on different semiconductor technologies for different wavelengths,” he concluded.

“Flir’s commitment to innovation spanning multiple sensing technologies has allowed our company to grow into the multi-billion-dollar company it is today,” said Flir chairman Earl Lewis.

“With our new partner’s platform of complementary technologies, we will be able to continue this trajectory, providing our employees, customers and stockholders even more exciting momentum for growth.”

Flir president and CEO Jim Cannon added that the deal is a “value-creating transaction”.  

“Together, we will offer a uniquely complementary end-to-end portfolio of sensory technologies for all key domains and applications across a well-balanced, global customer base,” he said.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • What actually happens if we do #FreetheMIBs?
    May 1, 2020
    Q-Free’s #FREEtheMIBs campaign highlights the use of manufacturer-specific data output, storage and communication protocols in traffic lights and ITS systems.
  • New technologies enable increased collaboration, cooperation
    July 17, 2012
    The continued expansion of IP camera networks increases the availability of useful information. At the same time, the opportunity exists to increase inter-agency collaboration. This makes information management all the more necessary in the control room environment. But the transportation sector could do a lot to help itself by gaining a better idea up front of what and how it wants to do things, says Electrosonic's Karl Johnson.
  • Radar effective as detection tool for hard shoulder running
    July 23, 2012
    Navtech Radar's millimetric-wave systems are being researched on the M42 in England to look into how this type of detector can assist in the opening of the hard shoulder as an additional running lane. Here, the company's Stephen Clark talks about the technology being used. In England, the Highways Agency's (the HA, an executive agency of the Department for Transport) Managed Motorways system - formerly called Active Traffic Management - uses electronic signs and signals mounted on gantries to direct drivers
  • Rekor Systems acquires All Traffic Data Services for $19m
    January 3, 2024
    Buy follows acquisition of another data firm, Southern Traffic Services, in 2022