India Clamps Down on Chinese CCTV with Emphasis on Security

·         Of the two separate gazette notifications that came out in March and April, one revolved around 'Make in India' guidelines for surveillance cameras and another was on the criteria for CCTV certification.

·         CP Plus, Hikvision and Dahua control more than 60% of the market in India.

·         The Federal Communications Commission (FCC), banned the sale of equipment from Hikvision and Dahua due to "unacceptable risks to national security".

·         The Indian government has been rejecting Chinese CCTV equipment tenders and has been preferring European players like Bosch. Notably, it is estimated that Bosch is around 7-10x more expensive than its Chinese counterparts.

 

[ABS News Service/28.09.2024

The Centre is looking to immediately operationalise its order that will likely weed out Chinese vendors from the supply chains of all forms of surveillance equipment in the aftermath of the recent coordinated pager explosions in Lebanon, multiple sources aware of the development told ET. The move is set to benefit local companies.

"In light of the pager explosions, critical sourcing of certain components or parts of the supply chain will be looked at in a big way by the government," one top industry source cited above said. "The government's policy on surveillance cameras is likely to come into effect on October 8. Once it comes out, all the Chinese players will be out of the picture, and Indian companies are likely to gain."

While the gazette notifications came out in March and April this year, sources said the government has accelerated its implementation and sharpened its focus on security after the Lebanon explosions. The government is set to fast-track the implementation of guidelines on CCTV cameras, which will allow players from "trusted locations" to sell in India.

"The emphasis on CCTVs predates the pager explosions. "The guidelines on security certification were issued in March and will come into effect in October. It is less about explosions and more about leakage of data that includes sensitive data as CCTV cameras are also installed at sensitive locations and can be used to track movements of people. You do not want to be using cameras that are not made in trusted locations–and for that purpose."

Visibility & Control

This person said a 'trusted location' would be one where New Delhi has visibility on the entire manufacturing chain and is convinced that the manufacturing chain is ‘okay’ and that there are ‘no backdoors’ in the equipment, which will either leak or take data out. While this person ruled out a "rip and replace" policy at this point, he said it was something that could be in the works eventually.

Of the two separate gazette notifications that came out in March and April, one revolved around 'Make in India' guidelines for surveillance cameras and another was on the criteria for CCTV certification. The orders from the government laid the foundation for changes in procurement of surveillance systems in India and placed a strong focus on promoting make in India products in the surveillance market.

"There is an order that to 'Make in India', these are the implications—that is one part of it," this person explained. "The second order relates to what can be sold in India—what are the security standards of equipment that can be sold here. So, there are security standards that are being prescribed for that. In addition to the BIS (Bureau of Indian Standards) quality assurance requirements, the government is adding security as one more factor that needs to be considered."

R&D Investments

"Currently, CP Plus, Hikvision and Dahua control more than 60% of the market in India and they will have to step up their efforts in improving the localisation content in their surveillance portfolio and double down on R&D.

CP Plus is an Indian company while Hikvision and Dahua are Chinese players. It is important to note that in November 2022, the United States government, through the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), banned the sale of equipment from Hikvision and Dahua due to "unacceptable risks to national security".

The FCC declared the companies a threat to national security after concerns that their equipment could be used by China to spy on the US.

Those in the know also said that lately, the Indian government has been rejecting Chinese CCTV equipment tenders and has been preferring European players like Bosch. Notably, it is estimated that Bosch is around 7-10x more expensive than its Chinese counterparts.