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Border and Port Security follow up to recent article 
"TSA Contracts show explosives detection still needs work at airports"

By Allen R. Gibson, HomelandDefenseStocks.com,BorderAndPortSecurity.com
December 2004  
 

An Oct. 2004 Deloitte Research Brief

Alessandro Cassinis and William D. Eggers had this to say about security costs:

The Price of Security

Improved security is a basic operating requirement in today’s economy, but it comes at a price. For the US shipping industry, various maritime security mandates are expected to drive up costs by roughly $8 billion over the next 10 years. Shippers will spend another $1.3 billion on up-front costs, and $730 million annually, complying with the International Ship and Port Facility Security Code. Trucking companies will also feel the pinch, since dirty bombs and deadly biological agents can be easily transported by land. The US Department of Homeland Security requires truckers to send complete cargo information to the Bureau of Customs and Border Protection via electronic data interchange before entering the country. Annual cost to the trucking industry: $91 million. For the airlines, tighter screening requirements for passengers and baggage are an enormous, ongoing expense. In the United States, most of that cost is passed along to travelers as a $10 per passenger security screening fee. However, the airlines must pay whatever costs the passenger fees do not cover, which averages about $315 million per year.

Thriving in the Secure Economy

Each year, Delta Airlines faces losses of up to $100 million from baggage mishandling. Through radio-frequency identification (RFID), Delta believes it can improve passenger security while slashing the cost of mishandled baggage by up to $37 million. Delta plans to use the system at all of its 563 operating gates throughout the United States, tagging 8.6 million pieces of luggage annually. By making it easier to locate misplaced bags, RFID will reduce Delta’s lost luggage expenses—including the cost of customer service and luggage delivery—and improve customer satisfaction. It could even give Delta a competitive advantage as the airline that gets passengers—and their luggage—safely to the desired destination. 

Allen R. Gibson 

Allen R. Gibson has over twenty-five years of experience in media and corporate communications. He has been a reporter, television producer, and marketing communications consultant for public companies in both the US and Canada.

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