Jane Chen / Shanghai Daily news
Shanghai will lead the country in revamping existing bankcards to
EMV-compliant smart cards in a program to improve financial security, the city
government announced at yesterday's bank meeting.
Pudong is the pilot area
for testing the program in the city.
EMV is a standard for the
inter-operation of integrated circuit cards ("Chip cards") and IC-capable POS
terminals, for the authentication of credit and debit card payments. 'EMV' is an
acronym of "Europay MasterCard VISA", the three companies which originally
cooperated to develop the standard.
China initiated the EMV program in the
wake of a large-scale bankcard data leak reported in June, involving 40 million
cardholders in the United States, officials said. It chose Shanghai to
pioneer the revamp because the city has the highest bankcard usage in the
country.
Banking experts pointed out that the up-grade is a huge and
complicated project involving all financial parties ranging from individuals to
banks, stores, restaurants and hotels. Therefore, it will be costly, they noted,
revealing that it will cost over 100 million yuan (US$12 million) to upgrade the
60 percent of the city's banking computer systems involved.
As revealed at
yesterday's meeting, there were more than 4,300 ATM terminals and 50,000 POS
terminals in Shanghai as of last November.