Vancouver is preparing for the 2026 FIFA World Cup by installing around 200 temporary surveillance cameras in key areas, citing public safety needs amid expected crowds of 350,000 visitors. City officials emphasize compliance with privacy laws, but experts raise concerns over data sharing with international entities like FIFA. The measures accompany new bylaws restricting public activities near event sites.
As Vancouver gears up to host matches for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, the city has begun installing approximately 200 temporary surveillance cameras in areas supporting tournament activities, including B.C. Place stadium, the FIFA Fan Festival at the Pacific National Exhibition (PNE), and training sites. These installations fulfill a FIFA requirement and aim to enhance public safety during the event, expected to draw about 350,000 visitors to B.C. Place next summer.
Blue warning signs about the temporary surveillance have appeared near the stadium, sparking public questions on usage and access. The Vancouver Host Committee states that the cameras are currently in a testing phase, with captured images blurred to safeguard privacy until the tournament starts. Once operational, footage will be limited to authorized personnel under city CCTV policies and provincial privacy laws, transmitted on secure Canadian infrastructure, and stored locally. It will be shared only as needed with FIFA and security contractors, and all cameras will be removed post-event.
Privacy advocates, however, express unease about potential data flows beyond Canadian borders. Aislin Jackson, policy staff counsel with the B.C. Civil Liberties Association, highlighted risks: “FIFA is not a Canadian public body. Security contractors, they may or may not be based inside of Canada.” She warned of sensitive biometric information in footage, especially amid advances in generative AI, and the weaker privacy protections in other jurisdictions.
These cameras arrive alongside a temporary bylaw, approved by Vancouver city council in November, which imposes restrictions on street vending, entertainment, and advertising within a two-kilometre radius of B.C. Place and 100 metres of the PNE Fan Festival. Effective for nine weeks from May 13, 2026, violations carry fines up to $1,000. The bylaw supports FIFA's global brand protection under the Host City Agreement.
Kristen Thomasen, an associate professor at the University of Windsor, noted that such surveillance could alter public behavior: “People will be expected to behave in a way that FIFA is designating.” This echoes past expansions, like the nearly 1,000 cameras for Vancouver's 2010 Winter Olympics, though the city's 90 units from that era are now defunct. Advocates fear "surveillance creep," where temporary tools persist, but officials assure full removal after the World Cup.