Skip to content


ePassport chips have only 2-year warranty

Summary

This Report from the National Audit Office 'Identity and Passport Service: Introduction of ePassports' (HC 152) examines the Identity and Passport Service's project to introduce ePassports. An ePassport contains an electronic chip and antenna, to store and transmit the passport holder's digital photograph and biographical information to an electronic reader. The chip also contains an electronic signature confirming the issuing country and the integrity of the data to provide extra checks at border control.

The set-up costs for the project were budgeted as £63m, and production costs from 2005-06 to 2010-11 are estimated to be £195m.

In addition, the Report finds that, while British ePassports are designed to last ten years, the electronic chips used have a warranty extending only two years. Although the chip has been laboratory tested, the NAO raises concerns that the chip's ability to withstand normal usage for the full ten-year passport lifespan is unproven.

Sir John Bourn, Head of the National Audit Office, said "the full security benefits of ePassports will not be realised until UK border control readers are fully upgraded, and it is only then that we will know the impact of this new technology on travellers."

The NAO recommends that the passport service negotiate a longer service warranty with the manufacturer and highlights the fact that longer-term risks to 'value for money' remain due to the technical novelty of ePassports, and the risk of organisational knowledge loss and potential problems using electronic readers at border control.

Found this story interesting?
Spread the news by clicking below to add it to your bookmarking service:

Law-Making Explained

This is a House of Commons Paper (HC 152): it is a report from the National Audit Office (NAO).

Find out more about House of Commons Papers.

How does it affect me?

It is reported that around four million ePassports have already been issued by the Identity and Passport Service: if you have received an ePassport, this affects you.

Read more about ePassports.

Find out more about the Identity and Passport Service.

Learn more about the work of the NAO.

Have Your Say Now


Find out how to have your say