IoTA_Logo(2).png

Institute of Transport Administration

Educating Transport Management since 1944

News

Edinburgh considering city centre pay and display parking for coach buses

3rd Apr 2026

Vehicle tax rates (V149 and V149/1)

2nd Apr 2026

Government Launches Depot Charging Scheme for Vans, HGVs and Coaches

2nd Apr 2026

New patrol training centre for the AA

2nd Apr 2026

New tachograph Regulations for Light Commercial Vehicles (LCVs) from July 2026.

31st Mar 2026

View all news »

Danish authorities in rush to close security loophole in Chinese electric buses

14 Nov 2025

Authorities in Denmark are urgently studying how to close an apparent security loophole in hundreds of Chinese-made electric buses that enables them to be remotely deactivated.

The investigation comes after transport authorities in Norway, where the Yutong buses are also in service, found that the Chinese supplier had remote access for software updates and diagnostics to the vehicles’ control systems – which could be exploited to affect buses while in transit.

Movia’s chief operating officer, said he was last week made aware that “electric buses – like electric cars – can be remotely deactivated if their software systems have web access”. He added: “This is not a Chinese bus problem. It is a problem for all types of vehicles and devices with Chinese electronics built in.”

Yutong said it “strictly complies with the applicable laws, regulations, and industry standards of the locations where its vehicles operate” 

Danish critics warned the issue exposes excessive dependence on Chinese technology.

Further information:

Danish authorities in rush to close security loophole in Chinese electric buses