Event theme
Aviation Security: Leading from the Front
"It's not enough to be up to date, you have to be up to tomorrow."
- David Ben-Gurion, First Prime Minister of Israel
Speaker Invited
Opening Session
Welcome from the Host
Shmuel Zakay
Managing Director, Ben Gurion International Airport
Israel Airports Authority
Welcome from ACI EUROPE
Olivier Jankovec
Director General
ACI EUROPE
Keynote Speakers
Keynote Address covering:
• How the threat is evolving and changing – the use of EU Risk Assessment tool to keep security up-to-date and relevant.
• Cross sector work on cyber threats, insiders, drones and other initiatives taken by DG MOVE.
• EU Aviation Security Strategy – how it is developing.
• How to future proof aviation security and move away from reactive measures (develop technology and support to industry through EU research projects).
• Close cooperation with industry and the roles that regulators and industry play together.
• What is expected to be the big takeaways from the ICAO Assembly
Carlos Mestre Zamarreño
Head of Unit
European Commission
The TSA Aviation Security Strategy and Future Initiatives
Stacey Fitzmaurice
Executive Assistant Administrator for Operations Support
Transportation Security Administration
El Al benchmarks and provides its own security at airports across the world. Where are the centres of excellence – and why? What new security ideas is El Al working on?
Ilan Hartman
Deputy Head of Security
El Al Israel Airlines
Coffee break in the exhibition
Speaker Invited
First Working Session
What are the present threats to aviation security? What are the latest solutions?
Moderator
David Trembaczowski-Ryder
Head of Aviation Security
ACI EUROPE
Defining Presentation
An overview & analysis of the terrorist threat, its likely evolution and how the EU & DG HOME is gearing to address this multi-facet challenge
Laurent Muschel
Director Security
European Commission
Speakers
Drones in Airports – Friends or Foes? Rather than a threat, autonomous drones can be integrated into airport security operations, to reduce cost, risk, and minimise business disruption.
Illy Gruber
VP Marketing
Percepto
IAA claims that Hold Baggage Screening at its airports is based on “the strictest international standards and state-of-the-art technological capabilities. So what claims does it now make for the “Next Generation of Hold Baggage Screening Systems”?
Dov Weinberg
Director of Security Technologies
Israel Airports Authority
Lunch in the exhibition
Speaker Invited
Second Working Session
Checkpoint for the 21st century
Moderator
José Luis Nieto
Head of Security, Aena, and Vice-Chair
ACI EUROPE Security Committee
Speakers
Strategy for the future: The new Schiphol Security Experience was implemented in 2015, providing “a new benchmark for airport security”. Almost five years on, how does the security experience need to further evolve to meet the objective of delivering “security as a service”?
Bart Mos
Senior Security Advisor
Amsterdam Airport Schiphol
ACI’s Smart Security strategy focuses on “defining the future of passenger and cabin baggage screening.” With the current improvements to the checkpoint, what else needs to be achieved to revolutionise airport security by 2040?
Billy Shallow
Manager, Smart Security
ACI World
How can airports combine biometric solutions with big data analytics to process travellers more efficiently?
Juan Manuel Segura
Director of Product Innovation
Securiport
The walkthrough passenger screening archway as a game changer in future checkpoints
Amir Beeri
CEO
Seempulse (A Rohde And Schwarz Company)
Coffee break in the exhibition
Speaker Invited
Third Working Session
What about the human? Why machines will never replace people in aviation security
Moderator
Johnnie Müller
Security Director
Copenhagen Airports and Chairman of ACI World Security Standing Committee
Speakers
What are the results of the Brussels Airport trials using X-ray screeners with Autism Spectrum Disorder?
Ronald Engels
Director Aviation
G4S Aviation Security SA
The time has come for the aviation business to re-focus on the human element of security – to develop a strong security culture.
Stacey Peel
Global Aviation Security Leader
Arup
AI & object recognition: the role of deep learning in security screening. Artificial intelligence is quickly changing the airport security landscape, how should it be appropriately leveraged?
Richard Thompson
Head of Market
Smiths Detection
How significant is The Insider Threat to airports? Where should we focus continuous improvements?
David BaMaung
Director of Strategic Development
CAMOR
“Human versus Machine”
Research on the Human Factor in Aviation Security
Yanik Sterchi
Research Scientist
University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland (FHNW), Center for Adaptive Security Research and Applications (CASRA)
Speaker Invited
Fourth Working Session
The need for a more joined-up approach between airport security and the threat of cyber-attack
Moderator
Dr John McCarthy
Senior Adviser CyberSecurity
ServiceTec
Speakers
Airports may inherently be more vulnerable, but are they an especial target for cyber-attacks compared to hospitals, power stations and other businesses? Do cyber-attacks have anything to do with terrorism?
Roee Laufer
Head of Cyber Division
Israel Airports Authority
“What practical steps can you take to manage cybersecurity risks? What are the building blocks for successful cooperation between the airport security management and the CISO?”
Eric Vautier
Group CISO
Groupe ADP
SMS, SeMS and ISMS: synergies and differences from an airport perspective. How do the different management systems for safety, security, and information security, interact? Where are the possible synergies, and how far can these be integrated?
Davy Van Hyfte
Head of Certification and Compliance
Brussels Airport Company
Israel will be one of the five cyber powers in the world”: What are the anticipated future cybersecurity challenges facing aviation? How is Israel’s recently-formed National Cyber Directorate responding? How will friendly aviation countries benefit?
Eynav Haim Sayag
Head of Technology R&D
Israel National Cyber Directorate
A national cybersecurity Agency view: how can it help the civil aviation sector and airports to step up with the management of information security risks pertaining to aviation security? What are some of the challenges to overcome? How should collaboration between the civil aviation authority responsible for aviation security and the national cybersecurity agency look? How much is the threat of cyber-attacks on airports from terrorism (as opposed to criminals and malicious hackers)?
Laurent Gerardin
Head of Sectorial Coordination Division
ANSSI
Airport cyber security begins with secure IoT devices. Airport IoT devices are inherently vulnerable to hackers. The speaker will demonstrate how a cyber-attack on a single IoT device could severely impact airport security and airside operational safety, and also present a solution which is about to be deployed in a major international airport
Roy Dagan
co-founder and CEO
SecuriThings
Coffee break in the exhibition
Speaker Invited
Fifth Working Session
Protecting the landside environment
Moderator’s presentation
The 22 March 2016 Brussels Airport landside bombings: What has been the major response in the landside space at Brussels and across other European airports?
Wilfried Covent
Senior Security Expert, Brussels Airport, and Immediate Past Chair
ACI EUROPE Security Committee
Speakers
Special briefing on Securing the Airport Community
Peter Nilsson
Police Commissioner
Airpol
If the 2016 Brussels Attack was a “wake-up call for European airports”, have they indeed woken-up to these kind of threats?
Pini Schiff
CEO
Israel Security Companies Association
Extending the airport security boundary: “Security should no longer be confined to the limits of the security check-point but become embedded in the entire passenger process beginning from home. This forms the true profiling of the passenger.”
Rami Nir
Director Security Division
Israel Airports Authority
Exercise Raptor: What are the lessons learned from this major exercise involving firearms, military, hostage negotiators, dogs, Heathrow staff, and hundreds of others?
James Cowan
Security Risk & Intelligence Advisor
Heathrow Airport Limited
Speaker Invited
The Grand Finalé
“40 years after I took part in the Entebbe Raid, in what ways do I believe we can reduce the cycle of violence which has made aviation a central target of the terrorists?”
Omer Bar Lev
Former MK and Former Commander of Sayeret Matcal, Colonel Retired
Keynote Speaker Background
A veteran of the daring Entebbe Raid, in which 102 Air France passengers were rescued, and other hostage situations, including the Savoy Hotel Attack and Bus 300, Colonel Omer Bar-Lev is a former commander of Sayeret Matcal, Israel’s special forces. Later he turned to politics, becoming a member of the Knesset, its Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, and Head of the Labor Party’s Political Security Committee. As a former lawmaker with profound combat experience, his policies recognise the limitations of force, and he believes that engagement and economic initiatives are key to halting the causes of violence.