Heathrow joins trial of RFID scheme
Baggage tracking to begin in September
BAA is to begin trials of baggage tracking using RFID
Heathrow will become the largest European airport to track passenger baggage using radio frequency identification (RFID) when trials begin in September.
Airport operator BAA will install the infrastructure on selected check-in desks to tag bags with RFID chips, which will then be scanned on entry into the baggage system. BAA will compare the read rates of RFID chips with existing barcode readers.
‘This will allow us to compare the success rate of RFID technology against our existing system,’ said a BAA spokeswoman. ‘We will then examine that insight to understand the benefits it offers.’
The International Air Transport Association (Iata) last month announced a plan to detail the cost of RFID infrastructure and how airports should proceed.
‘Such trials are incredibly valuable in building momentum for the introduction of RFID, and we are anxious to see the results,’ said Iata spokesman Lorne Riley.
‘It is particularly welcome because of the volume of passengers and baggage that Heathrow processes.’
RFID could save airports and airlines £400m a year in reduced baggage losses and replacement of existing messaging systems.
A trial of RFID technology at Heathrow could encourage other airports to roll out the infrastructure, says Peter Harrop, chairman at RFID analyst ID TechEx.
‘The funding must come from airports because they are more financially stable than airlines, and if the biggest airport involved can prove the financial case, others will follow,’ he said.
‘Heathrow will benefit from fewer lost bags and better efficiency through automation. But the real benefit comes when every bag is tagged at every airport and airline.’