Contract expected to reach up to 6,000 active offenders, a roughly 6x increase in scale over the previous contract

NEW YORK, June 16, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- SuperCom (NASDAQ:SPCB), a global provider of secured solutions for the e-Government, IoT, and Cybersecurity sectors, today announced that it has signed the contract for and launched the national electronic monitoring (EM) project with Sweden's Prison and Probation Services, the customer, following completion of the customary standstill waiting period and contract negotiations. This project was formally awarded earlier this year through a five-company competitive bid process. The contract establishes SuperCom as Sweden's national EM provider on a far larger scale than its first national project in Sweden, launched in 2019, when it displaced a roughly 25-year incumbent.

The total project value is estimated to range from $17 million, reflecting the base case scenario previously announced, to $75 million, the budget published by the customer. The published budget reflects potential expansion through a higher number of active offenders monitored, additional features and capabilities such as alcohol monitoring, the PureOne GPS solution and the Pure Officer mobile device for supervising officers. Revenues recognized by SuperCom will depend on actual usage levels.

Sweden has been a pioneer in electronic monitoring for public safety in Europe, with initial probation programs dating back to 1994. The Swedish Prison and Probation Service is undergoing a period of historic expansion, and with it, broader use of electronic monitoring. The nationwide contract is designed to cover all of Sweden's prison and probation electronic monitoring programs, reflecting roughly 6x the scale of the program SuperCom first launched with the same customer in 2019. Under the contract, SuperCom will deploy its PureSecurity Electronic Monitoring (EM) Suite across a broad range of public safety programs, including GPS tracking of offenders, home detention monitoring, and indoor facility monitoring. The contract allows for expansion to up to 6,000 active offenders across these programs.