Skip to main content

Just the ticket for speedier banking and bus travel

Dutch digital security provider Gemalto is to provide South Africa’s Standard Bank with a multifunction contactless payment card enabling users to pay for transit fares and other goods and services with one digital wallet. Standard Bank customers can now use the new MasterCard debit card to wave and pay at the gates in the public transport stations, without needing to carry cash or a separate travel card. The bank says the "Muvo" card initiative will help cardholders gain greater convenience while at the s
November 22, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Dutch digital security provider 3866 Gemalto is to provide South Africa’s Standard Bank with a multifunction contactless payment card enabling users to pay for transit fares and other goods and services with one digital wallet. Standard Bank customers can now use the new MasterCard debit card to wave and pay at the gates in the public transport stations, without needing to carry cash or a separate travel card.  The bank says the "Muvo" card initiative will help cardholders gain greater convenience while at the same time provide competitive advantages to Standard Bank and reduce the burden of managing cash on public transportation in the city of Durban.
 
The partnership has already resulted in the provision of 100,000 cards for the Ethekwini Municipality, which is looking to dramatically improve ticketless payments for its public transport system in the coastal city of Durban.  Commuters can load funds into their cards at around 30 sales points throughout the city. The card complies with the exacting requirements of the National Department of Transport (NDoT) for payment and transport to be combined in one single application. It can also be customised to reflect the profile of individual public transport users, enabling NDoT to adapt its fares accordingly.
 
"The new card showcases the innovative value we strive to offer our customers by integrating the transit ticket inside a banking card - secured with bank-strength security - along with a payment wallet,” commented Mike Hughes, business development manager of beyond payments, Standard Bank’s innovation and new business division. "We are looking to extend contactless payments to a number of different market sectors including events, schools and university campuses, as well as toll roads and other players in the transport sector”.
 
"This is a new era of card convergence with multiple services increasingly being combined on a single product that maximises convenience for the end user," added Gabrielle Bugat, senior vice president at Gemalto. "We’ll work with Standard Bank in making financial services more accessible to the underserved population by using transport as a stepping stone.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Flowbird wins EuMo Expo payment gong
    March 3, 2021
    'Best fare' guarantee for passengers going contactless to pay for multimodal travel
  • ‘Wave and pay’ parking
    July 17, 2012
    APT SkiData has further extended the ‘wave and pay’ capabilities of its parking solutions with the new Artema EMV Level 2 contactless payment module as an integral part of its latest payment devices. Sited conveniently below the ‘traditional’ magnetic strip reader, the reader accepts a number of different contactless payment types in unattended environments, including Visa payWave and MasterCard PayPass cards.
  • 3M to acquire FSTech from Federal Signal Corporation
    June 22, 2012
    3M has entered into an agreement to acquire the business of Federal Signal Technologies Group (FSTech) from Federal Signal Corporation for a purchase price of US$110 million in cash, subject to post-closing adjustments. 3M says the fast-growing $3 billion electronic tolling industry is projected to grow at a rate greater than 12 per cent per year as government agencies increasingly rely on tolling to fund roadway infrastructure, construction and maintenance. The company says FSTech’s solutions for electroni
  • Parking operators need to learn from Uber
    November 6, 2019
    For parking operators' customers, end of journey may just be start of frustration