Skip to main content

Adaptive sets sights for Scandlines

Vision detection specialist will help with smart port projects in Germany and Denmark
By Adam Hill December 6, 2022 Read time: 1 min
Adaptive will deliver automatic number plate recognition and vehicle identification technology at port entry and exit gates (© Batke82 | Dreamstime.com)

Adaptive Recognition has been awarded a contract to provide technology allowing Scandlines to identify vehicles at two of its ports: Puttgarden in Germany and Rødby in Denmark.

Over the next year, Adaptive will deliver automatic number plate recognition and vehicle identification technology at the entry and exit gates, streamlining passenger and freight check-in flows.

"This project marks Scandlines' foray into digitising ferry ports and turns the Puttgarden-Rødby connection into a real-time, end-to-end ferry operation with technology from Adaptive Recognition, making the two ports some of the smartest in Europe," says Carsten Nørland, CEO of Scandlines.

The work will be handled from Adaptive Recognition Nordic, based in Copenhagen, Denmark. Managing partner Alan Tofte says the company has gained years of experience "working in the maritime sector with individual shipping companies, ports, marine and maritime business service industries".
 

Related Content

  • October 11, 2021
    ITS World Congress 2021: it's open!
    Hamburg in Germany will be global focus of mobility sector for the next week
  • July 31, 2012
    Debating the future development of ANPR
    What future is there for automatic number plate recognition? Will it be supplanted by electronic vehicle identification, or will continuing development maintain the technology's relevance? In recent years, digitisation and IP-based communication networks have allowed Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR) to achieve ever-greater utility and a commensurate increase in deployments. But where does the technology go next - indeed, does it have a future in the face of the increasing use of, for instance, Dedi
  • August 11, 2021
    Consortium to study UK eHighway feasibility 
    Partners including Siemens hope overhead electricity lines will serve major roads by 2030s
  • June 9, 2020
    Taking virtual control of the control room
    When you can’t meet customers face to face, it creates problems for all businesses. But Adam Hill finds that the control room tech sector has been adapting