Skip to main content

CARTES 2013: Guest of Honour Country Brazil is land of opportunity

A touch of the Rio Carnival came to Paris yesterday as CARTES 2013 welcomed Brazil as the show’s Guest of Honour Country. The drums, whistles, vivid colour and excitement of a parade of Samba dancers on the exhibition hall floor lit up the wealth of exciting opportunities available for the smart security sector in one of the world’s most populous nations.
November 20, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
A touch of the Rio Carnival came to Paris yesterday as CARTES 2013 welcomed Brazil as the show’s Guest of Honour Country.

The drums, whistles, vivid colour and excitement of a parade of Samba dancers on the exhibition hall floor lit up the wealth of exciting opportunities available for the smart security sector in one of the world’s most populous nations. The media spotlight will be on the Latin American country as it hosts both the FIFA World Cup and the Olympic Games over the next couple of years – and all eyes in the contactless payments industry will be turned there too as business opportunities abound. The Brazilian market is characterised by a very high ratio of payment cards per inhabitant: by 2017 the penetration rate is expected to be more than 300%, making it the most dynamic market in the region. One of Brazil’s biggest smart security companies IntelCav is primed for worldwide growth but there is plenty of room in Brazil for foreign firms too. Proving there is much more to the country than soccer, Lambada and Copacabana, Brazil is already a strategic market for a number of established global brands such as Arjowiggins Security, Gemalto, Giesecke & Devrient, Morpho (Safran) and Oberthur Technologies. And this morning, in Room 502, a special conference provides visitors with a perfect chance to catch up on exactly where some of the challenges and opportunities lie. Brazil: Building Trust in Mobile Life is chaired by Edgar Betts, Associate Director of the Smart Card Alliance Latin America and mirrors the main theme of CARTES 2013.

Internet banking, migrating voucher products to chip using EMV technology and the fascinating – and unexpected - links between talking trees in Brazil’s Amazon Rainforest and the smart cities of tomorrow will be am ong the topics under discussion. Get ready now for a vibrant tomorrow.

Related Content

  • Ericsson to be the prime integrator for the Brazil’s smart city project
    May 16, 2014
    Ericsson has been chosen by Telefonica Vivo to integrate the smart parking and smart lighting for its digital city project in Aguas de Sao Pedro, Brazil. Collaborating with leading technology partners, Ericsson will be responsible for providing smart lighting and smart parking solutions and system integration. The design, installation and rollout of the project are all included in the scope of the agreement, as is responsibility for managed services, including operations and maintenance, once it has bee
  • GENIVI Alliance showcases connected car technologies in Las Vegas
    December 22, 2015
    Alliance celebrates GENIVI "cars on the road" with keynote at Consumer Telematics Show, panel sessions at CES and fifth-annual Member Showcase at Trump International Hotel The GENIVI Alliance, an automotive industry association driving the broad adoption of specified, open source, In-Vehicle Infotainment (IVI) software, is to showcase its latest connected car technologies through a series of industry events during CES 2016 week in Las Vegas from 5-7 January.
  • Cable cars come of age in trans-continental expansion
    April 30, 2015
    David Crawford explores a high-level option of public transport. Sharing its origin with that of ski lifts at winter sports resorts in the European Alps, urban aerial cable transport is attracting growing interest as a low-footprint, low-energy alternative to conventional public transport that can swoop over ground-level traffic congestion.
  • Brazil's joint airport concession closer to reality
    January 15, 2015
    Brazil's plan to tender a joint airport concession proposed by Rio Grande do Sul state involving the Salgado Filho airport in Porto Alegre and a new airport in Portão-Nova Santa Rita is one step closer to reality. Civil aviation department SAC has delivered a document to newly sworn-in governor José Ivo Sartori, which included an evaluation by the country's air space control department Decea; according to SAC head Eliseu Padilha, going through with the concession is the best option. The final decision li