Identity, Security, Payments, Biometrics, Smart Cards and Authentication News

Asia Pacific region ripe for mass transit, banking convergence with contactless cards

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

This is a perfect time in the Asia Pacific region for issuers of contactless cards in mass transit and banking to consider working together with merchant outlets and retailers so that all can benefit from a multiapplication platform, according to a new analysis from research company Frost & Sullivan. However, one major problem that must be overcome, the report points out, is reader interoperability.

The analysis, “Strategic Assessment of the Asia Pacific Smart Card Mass Transit and Payment Markets” indicates that the use of smart cards in both industries has grown considerably over the past few years in that area.


“Contactless smart card technology is able to provide this common platform and can be designed to create a balance between security and commercial application,” notes Frost & Sullivan Industry Analyst Michelle Foong. “The market in Asia Pacific is ready for this convergence in many countries, and some are already in the process of convergence to reap the benefits of multiapplication.”

However, readers and cards used within the mass transit and banking markets may not always be interoperable and based on common protocols. Their back end systems and infrastructure are often not linked, making interoperability a short-term restraint for the market.

“Retailers and merchant outlets need to have a common platform of readers and terminals to accept cards from a variety of issuers, be it from transit agencies or financial institutions,” says Foong. “This has not happened in most cases and it will take some time before all the readers become interoperable.”

In order to ensure convergence between the two industries, various parties such as transit agencies, financial institutions, merchants, and card issuers need to work together to create a healthy, efficient and interoperable ecosystem. The contactless smart card infrastructure should also be developed further for this to materialize. [end] 

The Smart Card Alliance Transportation Council has published a white paper examining how the transit industry can best make use of NFC technology.

“One of the major challenges facing transit agencies today is how to capitalize on the ever-growing popularity of mobile phones with a solid mobile strategy,” said Transportation Council Chairman Craig Roberts. “This white paper builds on the knowledge base developed in earlier white papers to foster a greater understanding of NFC technology, explain its role in the transit industry, and shed light on key issues facing the transit industry in developing a mobile strategy.”

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Safety science company UL has acquired Melbourne, Australia-based Witham Laboratories, a global provider of payment software and hardware security reviews.

The acquisition expands UL’s reach into the payment card security assessment field and will enable it to provide security reviews of payment terminal, software and infrastructure.

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The Asia Pacific region is one of the largest users of smart cards, so much that it now leads the world in using the cards to pay for travel, reports iTWire.

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Global Industry Analysts Inc. released a report forecasting the outlook on the global smart card market to reach 10.9 billion units by 2015.

GIA credits the growth driven largely by major initiatives in the financial, government and security sectors, with the telecom sector at the way ahead of the pack as the largest end-user. Increasing usage of contactless technology, newer applications and mandatory EMV migration across countries are also major drivers boosting the global market for smart cards.

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India transport operator Ahmedabad Janmarg Ltd. has launched a smart transit card for commuters traveling on the region’s bus system, according to ISO&Agent.

The agency began a six-month trial and August 2010 followed by a soft and silent launch in January 2012. The card is available now for a nonrefundable fee of 25 rupees ($.50 US cents) and allows commuters to travel for up to 100 minutes on one bus, for the minimum fare.

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The Jacksonville Transit Authority (JTA) experienced an overwhelmingly large amount of people signing up for the region’s new STAR smart payment card system, according to a local news brief.

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