Government ID, Smart Cards, Identification and Authentication Technology

U.K. identity card project seeks bidders

Friday, September 21, 2007 in News

Bidding for the $2 million biometric national ID card for the United Kingdom is expected to get exciting in the near future. Several U.S. companies are expected to bid on the project with the U.K. Identity and Passport Service. Bidders must be able to deliver and manage large, secure systems; respond flexibly to requirements and deliver high-quality customer service. Expected bidders include Cogent Communications, Cross Match Technologies, L-1 Identity Solutions, Motorola, Accenture Ltd., EDS Corp., and IBM.


Competition heats up for U.K. identity card work

Several U.S. companies are expected to participate in bidding for the upcoming $2 billion biometric national identity card system being developed in the United Kingdom.

Systems integrators such as Accenture Ltd., Computer Science Corp., EDS Corp. and IBM Corp. are among those that have expressed interest in the project, according to U.K. media reports. And biometrics companies such as Cogent Communications Inc., Cross Match Technologies Inc., L-1 Identity Solutions Inc. and Motorola Inc. also are expected to participate in the bidding process.

About 50 suppliers met in a recent conference with the U.K.’s Identity and Passport Service to review the upcoming procurement. The next stage is pre-qualification of suppliers.

The IPS published a notice last month in the Official Journal of the European Union inviting potential suppliers to express interest. This paved the way for a Framework Agreement, a contract creating a list of pre-qualified suppliers, along with a set of agreed contract terms. The passport service said in a statement on its Web site that it intends to fulfill its requirements from this pool of suppliers. “I am confident that the supplier community will step up to the mark in helping us construct this key national asset,” IPS Chief Executive James Hall said in a news release.

“To achieve the Scheme’s objectives, IPS will need a range of capabilities that will come from a combination of the private and public sectors,” Hall said in the announcement.

Hall said private-sector participants must be able to:

  • Deliver large, complex, secure systems;
  • Manage such systems to deliver reliable performance;
  • Respond flexibly to evolving requirements and priorities;
  • Deliver a consistent, high-quality customer experience to the millions of people who will use the Scheme; and
  • Provide outstanding value for the money invested.

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