Nuctech Company
Nuctech Company, Ltd is a Chinese partially state-owned security inspection products company, headquartered in Beijing, created in 1997 as an offshoot of Tsinghua University. Nuctech Company's parent company, Tsinghua Tongfang, is controlled by the China National Nuclear Corporation, a state-owned company that manages China's civilian and military nuclear fuel development program. Several countries have raised concerns about contracts for security scanning equipment due to the company's partial state ownership and ties to the Chinese Communist Party and Chinese military.
History
Nuctech Company was founded in 1997 in Beijing as Nuctech Co, Ltd. by several professors from Tsinghua University who wanted to commercialize results of their research in container inspection technology. In 1999, the company sold inspection systems to Chinese customs and in 2001 signed its first international contracts with Australia and the United Arab Emirates. In 2006, the company won a contract to install scanners to detect dangerous liquids in a total of 147 airports across China. In 2015, the company opened a factory in Brazil. In 2018, Nuctech opened a factory in Kobyłka, a town near Warsaw. In 2016, Nuctech formed a subsidiary, FoundMacro, to serve the defense sector.The company's x-ray scanners and other security equipment were used at the 2014 World Cup and the 2016 Olympic Games and 2016 Paralympic Games in Brazil and other large public events including the 2015 Milan Expo, the 2015 Wimbledon tennis tournament, and the 2018 Summit of the Americas.
In April 2024, European Commission authorities raided the offices of Nuctech in Poland and the Netherlands as part of an investigation into breaches of the EU Foreign Subsidies Regulation. Nuctech subsequently lost its legal challenge in the General Court over the raids. Nuctech appealed the ruling in the European Court of Justice and lost in March 2025. In December 2025, the European Commission announced that it deepened its probe into Nuctech.
Ownership and management
Nuctech is a subsidiary of Tsinghua Tongfang, which is publicly traded on the Shanghai Stock Exchange. Tsinghua Tongfang owns two thirds of Nuctech's shares. In 2019, the China National Nuclear Corporation, a state-owned company that manages China's civilian and military nuclear fuel development program, bought a 21 percent stake in Tsinghua Tongfang. The company has stated that CNNC owns 16 percent of Nuctech shares through Tsinghua Tongfang. In April 2021, a Nuctech spokesperson stated that "the Chinese government does not control the company or its management decisions."Executive directors and chairmen of the company have included Hu Haifeng, son of former General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party Hu Jintao, from 2003 until 2008, Rong Yonglin, and Zhou Liye. The current chairman is Chen Zhiqiang.
According to a 2022 report by the Associated Press, "Nuctech’s ownership structure is so complex that can be difficult for outsiders to understand the true lines of influence and accountability."
Products and services
Nuctech Company manufactures security inspection products, including scanners for baggage and parcel inspection, cargo and vehicle inspection, personnel inspection, and fever screening technology. Nuctech's products are used in civil aviation, customs inspection, railway inspection, highway freight inspection, building security and large event security. In the United States, Nuctech body scanners are also used to detect contraband in prisons.Nuctech security equipment is in use at airports across Europe, including in Spain, Italy, Cyprus and the United Kingdom and by customs and border agencies in Ireland and Finland. The company also reported contracts in countries including Syria, Australia, Turkey, Iran, Belgium, Venezuela, Zimbabwe, Norway and South Korea.
Criticism
Nuctech Company has been criticized for its practices and mentioned in a number of media reports in relation to controversies.Data security
The company's ties to the Chinese Communist Party and CNNC have raised concerns from some countries about data security, including Canada and Lithuania. In 2020, customs authorities in Finland stated that they found no security grounds to reject a bid by Nuctech. In 2021, Nuctech responded to a decision by Lithuania to eliminate it in a tender for national security reasons by stating that it has not had any data or security incident reported by customers and that the company "fully complied with Lithuanian, Polish and EU laws and regulations, not to the laws of any third country, including China". A Lithuanian special governmental commission that vets deals for national security impact on August 12, 2021, approved the purchase and installation of Nuctech X-ray equipment at the Belarusian border.In 2022, several members of the European Parliament issued a letter challenging a tender to award Nuctech for scanners in the Strasbourg Airport due to security concerns.