
A  study of people’s attitudes to the use of biometric identification for  travellers has revealed that 89% of citizens are willing to provide  details such as fingerprints.
 
 The huge backing comes despite the fact that 69% of the 3,000 people questioned have not yet shared biometric data.
 
 The survey of people in the UK, Australia, France, Germany, Japan and the US was carried out by Accenture.
 
 Over half (62%) of citizens in the six countries said they were  willing to share biometric information to make their country’s borders  more secure, 58% said they would give details if it sped up customs and  border control processing, and 56% would do so if it made travel more  convenient. UK citizens were the most willing of the six nationalities  in every category, at 69%, 64% and 62% respectively.
 
 “The survey findings show strong support from citizens for the  greater use of biometrics to secure national borders, enable more  convenient travel and facilitate faster processing through customs and  border control,” said Mark Crego, head of Accenture’s global Border and  Identity Services business. 
 
 “The majority of citizens are willing to share biometric details  to help increase border security and, at the same time, reap benefits  such as faster processing times at borders and more convenient travel.”
 
 Pre-registration to help travellers clear customs and border  control quicker is one reason that 58% of respondents said they would be  willing to share their biometric details.
 
 Only 23% of those questioned had used automated border clearance  solutions, such as e-gates at airports and border crossings, but of  those, 80% said they would use an e-gate again.
 
 “The strong support by citizens for technologies that can improve  travel and secure borders demonstrates how important it is for border  management agencies to continue to adopt new tools that meet the demands  of citizens and better manage the transit of people across borders,”  said Crego. 
 
 “Increasing the use of biometrics and introducing registered  traveller programmes can make travelling faster, safer and more  convenient, and strengthen both border and national security through  improved intelligence gathering.” 
 
 Of those questioned, 71% support the use of biometrics to verify  the identities of all persons crossing borders, while 73% believe the  use of biometrics makes countries more secure.
 
 But 68% said that prior to sharing biometric information, they  would want to know what security measures were in place to protect the  data, and 67% would want to know how it was going to be used.