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] 

Mobile operator Digicel Pacific Limited has announced the deployment of VeriFone’s mWallet services and NFC-enabled payment systems in the Kingdom of Tonga.

Starting this week, Digicel subscribers in the the Tongan capital Nuku’alofa will be able to receive NFC tags that are linked to their mobile phone numbers and VeriFone’s contactless payment acceptance systems. Customers can affix these tags to their phones to tap and pay at over 50 merchants in Nuku’alofa.

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Romanian bank BRD, a unit of Société Générale, has selected Oberthur Technologies to supply multi-application payment cards. These cards have payment scheme applications, as well as the ability to host transport, access control, PKI or biometric apps.

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Calgary, Alberta is pushing forward with the anticipated summer launch of a new smart card payment system for public transit, according to the Calgary Herald.

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survey conducted on behalf of MasterCard Worldwide by Harris Interactive reveals that U.S. transit riders are ready to kick cash to the curb in favor of contactless payments. Commuters also want to consolidate their mass transit tickets into one card that can be use across multiple transit systems.

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Cubic Transportation Systems has introduced Nextaccount, an account-based open payment platform that offers travelers the convenience to use contactless bank cards, student IDs and mobile phones as their smart ticket, in addition to transit issued smart cards.

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In ABI Research’s newest market study analysis, NXP Semiconductors has reportedly claimed the top spot in the contactless ticketing market with 74% of the market share.

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