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Canada prepares to introduce plastic money
Canadian citizens will soon have a new type of plastic in their wallet – cash.
Tue, Apr 12 2011 at 12:18 PM
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Photo: rick/Flickr
When I think of paying with plastic, I think of credit or debit cards. However, my thought process is going to have to change. Canada will soon join a growing list of countries that use a polymer-based plastic instead of paper for its cash. The new plastic money will be rolled out in phases with the $100 bill scheduled for introduction in November. In March 2012, a $50 bill will be added to the mix and the rest of the smaller bills will be introduced by the end of 2013.
There are several benefits to plastic cash – enhanced security, a longer life and the money is even cleaner. We all know how dirty money can be but the new bills are resistant to water, oil, sweat, dust and more.
“Further, scientific evaluation has shown that there is significantly less bacteriological growth on polymer banknotes, and that any bacteria which gets onto the notes quickly dies because of the lack of nutrients on the non-porous and non-fibrous material.” Source: Securency International Pty Ltd.
While the cleanliness factor is nice, the security benefits are one of the biggest draws of switching to plastic money. Australia has been using polymer-based cash for more than a decade and the country has seen a significant reduction in counterfeit bills.
The polymer-based money is also recyclable. The money is made out of polypropylene, which can be recycled and used to create new products including plumbing fittings, compost bins and other household items.
I can’t think of a downside to plastic money. I know that BPA is often associated with plastics but even our paper money is contaminated with BPA.
Have you ever visited a country that uses plastic cash? What did you think of it?
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Whether it's paper, plastic, digital, doesn't matter. It's still the same fiat, debt-based, counterfit money created out of thin air by international banking cartels.
I'd like to know more about the way the money will be printed (ink bonded into the plastic, or printed on top of a colored background like an iron-on transfer?) and how the money material is made (just pressed into sheets like cling wrap, or woven like Tyvek?)
It sounds good in theory, but how do you prevent receiving counterfeit bills? Paper bills can be tested with those ink markers, but plastic is non-porous and non-absorbent, so that's no good.
Melissa, when you use an acronym in an article it is a good idea to define it. I know that the BSA is the Boy Scouts of America but I haven't the foggiest idea what a BPA might be. Perhaps BiPartisan Anteaters?
Here's MNN's eco-glossary definition of BPA, which provides more information and the most recent BPA-related news stories. http://www.mnn.com/eco-glossary/bpa
Bisphenol-A (I think that's how it's spelled) and it's the plastic that they used to make Nalgene bottles and hard plastic baby bottles out of. It has been found to leech into the contained materials (usually meaning food or drink) and can cause hormonal disturbances in humans.