Brazil’s Atech on the Cutting Edge of Air Traffic Control

Atech Tecnologias CrÀ­ticas, a Brazilian technology company, has just signed a contract to develop aerial traffic control systems in Venezuela. The deal, for the value of US$ 1.5 million, was signed with the neighboring country’s National Institute of Civil Aviation this month.

This is the second contract the company signs with the Venezuelans in three months. In October, Atech was chosen by the local government to manage the integration of a network of meteorological radars and sensors in the country.


The company is responsible for 90% of the aerial traffic control systems in Brazil and started exporting technology around three years ago. The company first clients on the foreign market were the United States and Mexico, where there are three Atech aerial traffic management systems in operation.


At the beginning of this year, the company also started selling to the Japanese. According to the company marketing director, Zareh Balekjan, a contract was signed for the development of software for an industry in Japan, whose name cannot be announced.


Balekjan stated that international sales still answer to a small share of the company revenues, but they helped increase company revenues in 2004. Atech grew from revenues of US$ 60 million in 2003 to a forecasted US$ 100 million in 2004, a 66% increase.


Atech was the company responsible for integrating the entire System for the Vigilance of the Amazon (Sivam), implemented in 2000 by the Brazilian federal government to collect figures about the Amazon forest.


Through the new contract signed with Venezuela, Atech is going to help modernize the Maiquetia Aerial Control Centre (ACC), which controls aerial traffic in the north of Venezuela, where the largest movement of civil aircraft is concentrated.


The company is going to supply software for aerial control of civil aviation, install the system and integrate it to the existing system, as well as train operators to provide technical service. Balekjan believes that the system will be operational in one year.


Business with the neighboring country began after the Venezuelans visited the country, last year, and saw the Atech services and products in operation. Atech also travelled to Venezuela to offer its products and services.


According to Balekjan, closer ties between the Brazilian and Venezuelan government also collaborated to the closing of the deals. “And we are making an effort to export technology. We are trying to increase the participation of exports in our revenues,” he said.


The previous contract signed with Venezuela, in October, was for US$ 1 million. The contract is going to take around one year. Atech is going to organize an interface between sensors and radars at an operations center in Caracas, the Venezuelan capital.


This is as part of a program called Venehmet, in which, apart from improving weather forecasts, the government plans to administer the water resources in the country, monitoring the flow of rivers and the behaviour of lakes.


The company’s marketing director states that Atech is also interested in selling to the Arab countries, but they have not yet done any business with the region.


A marketing plan to enter the Middle Eastern and North African market, however, has already been put into practice. “But it is not for the short term,” he explained.


National Technology


Atech is a Brazilian company with 100% national capital. The company is based in the city of São Paulo, in southeastern Brazil, and also has units in Manaus and Brasí­lia, respectively in the North and Midwest, as well as a subsidiary, AmazonTech, in the United States.


The company was opened in 1997 so as to participate in the implementation of the Sivam. Nowadays, however, the company also operates on other fronts, such as the development of aerial control for airports, technological systems for the sectors of public safety and health.


Atech has also created Infopol, a program that integrates the databases of police forces, hospitals, fire departments, and other institutions so as to help fight crime.


The company also developed a computerized system to identify fingerprints, and a unique health system for cities, through which a doctor in the southern zone of the city, for example, can have access to the medical report of a patient who was previously treated in the northern zone.


Contact


Atech
(+55 11) 3040-7314
www.atech.br
zareh@atech.br


ANBA ”“ Brazil-Arab News Agency

Tags:

You May Also Like

Ex-Union Activist and New Brazil’s Labor Minister Promises Higher Minimum Wage

One of the objectives of the new Minister of Labor and Employment, LuÀ­s Marinho, ...

Brazil Thanks Chile for Taking In Political Refugees During the Dictatorship

The inauguration of the new President of Chile, Michelle Bachelet, is a signal of ...

Belle at Heart of Brazil’s Senate Scandal Bares It All in Playboy

Monica Veloso, a beautiful journalist and former anchor for Globo TV in Brazilian capital ...

Panamí¡ Gets Brazil’s Top of the Line Jet

Brazilian aircraft manufacturer Embraer delivered today the first of 12 Embraer 190 Advanced Range ...

Brazil Takes to Brussels Its Ideas for a WTO Revamping

Brazil’s Minister of Institutional Relations, Jaques Wagner, participates today, in Brussels, Belgium, on the ...

Brazil Asks UN for a Bigger Continental Platform

Brazil’s Navy and Petrobras technical experts, scientists, and representatives of the Ministry of Foreign ...

US Curbs on China Boost Brazil’s Printing Sector

Brazilian exports of printing material increased 60.21% in the first half of the year ...

Brazil in Rush to Get a Mercosur/EU Accord. Sides Still a World Apart.

A Spanish Conservative member of the European Union Parliament insisted this week in the ...

US$ Millions in Brazilian Shoes Barred by Argentina

Argentina put new rules in place for the importation of footwear on September 1st, ...

Damascus Fair Draws Brazil’s Small Businesses Attention

São José do Rio Preto, city in the interior of the Brazilian southeastern state ...