Skip to main content

Denmark pulls the plug on Hikvision cameras

Around 170 new road surveillance cameras were purchased by the Danish Roads Directorate – Vejdirektoratet - in late 2022 from Hikvision at a cost of around €670,000.
By David Arminas August 22, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
Here’s looking at you! (image © Aleksei Iasinskii/Dreamstime)

The Danish Road Directorate, Vejdirektoratet, is removing road surveillance cameras made by Chinese manufacturer Hikvision because of cybersecurity concerns.

Around 170 new cameras were purchased by the Danish Roads Directorate in late 2022 from Hikvision at a cost of €670,000. However, the company had previously been heavily criticised by Danish security agencies and human rights organisations, according to Danish media reports in Computer Word Denmark and the political and economic on-line newspaper Altinget.

Altinget, in a report this month, said the directorate was “reviewing our roadside equipment to ensure it complies with relevant guidelines from the Centre for Cybersecurity”. The centre is Denmark’s national IT security authority and incorporates the Network Security Service and the National Centre of Excellence within cyber security. Its mission is to advise Danish public authorities and private companies that support functions vital to society on how to prevent, counter and protect against cyberattacks.

Jens Myrup Pedersen, a professor of electronic systems and security at Denmark’s Aalborg University, told Altinget that removing the Hikvision equipment was a good way to mitigate cyberattacks. “There can be a concern that these systems are created with back doors which you might not necessarily be aware of,” he told Altinget. “That could mean the Chinese government, for example, might be able to access data if it found this interesting at some point.”

Western countries have concerns that Chinese security laws might require private companies, especially with partial or majority Chinese government ownership, to hand over data to government authorities if asked to do so.

Hikvision equipment also came under scrutiny in late 2020 when Denmark’s AkademikerPension announced it is blacklisting the company, according to a report by IPE International Publishers. The firm reportedly failed to produce a report regarding its involvement in human rights issues in China’s Xinjiang Province. Jens Munch Holst, chief executive of AkademikerPension, reportedly said at the time that his company had “lost patience” with Hikvision.

Hikvision surveillance products are already banned in the US over national security concerns, Altinget reported.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • IRD wins Georgia state weigh-in-motion deal
    March 9, 2015
    International Road Dynamics (IRD) will design, supply and install 19 mainline weigh-in-motion systems throughout the US State of Georgia. IRD, based in the city of Saskatoon in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan, said the contract is worth US$7.93 million. The deal includes mainline WIM scales on the interstate, at the roadside and in scale houses as well as license plate reading, USDOT number reading, side view cameras and over-height detection systems at 19 weigh station locations. IRD’s systems will c
  • Colourful crosswalks are promoting safer crossings
    August 14, 2017
    Safety remains paramount but crosswalks can also be colourful and fun. The increasing popularity of colourful crosswalks is exercising the creativity of municipalities around Europe. An example is the use of DecoMark preformed thermoplastic markings in Rotterdam, Netherlands. The art collective Opperclaes, working with urbanism agency Street Makers, designed an artwork-style crosswalk on the Westblaak area of Rotterdam. The Westblaak is a busy street in the city centre and connects Churchill Square with the
  • Salini Impregilo morphs into Webuild
    May 19, 2020
    The name of a major player on the international construction scene has changed.
  • How IRF training is helping save lives in Jamaica
    July 20, 2012
    According to World Health Organisation figures, 307 lives were lost in over 13,000 road accidents in 2011, a figure dominated by male drivers and car occupants. Buoyed by IRF’s Safer Road by Design seminar which preceded the Congress, the Road Safety Unit in the Jamaican Ministry of Transport, Works and Housing is already taking steps to address the presence of turned-down ends and concrete utility poles on the country’s roadsides.