HCM City (VNS/VNA) - Banks have embarked on the conversion of magneticpayment cards into chip cards for greater security, but the COVID-19 pandemichas significantly slowed down their efforts, making it difficult for them tomeet the deadline.
Last year the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV) had unveiled a plan to convert atleast 30 percent of all cards to chip cards by the end of 2019 and make 35 percentof ATMs and 50 percent of point of sale terminals machines compatible withcontact and contactless chip technologies.
All ATMs and POS machines in the market were supposed to comply with VietnamChip Card Specifications (VCCS) by December 31 this year, and all domesticcards with basic standards for chip cards by the end of 2021.
Nguyen Minh Tam, deputy CEO of Sacombank, said his bank was among the first toissue domestic cards using EMV chip technology, which optimises the security ofcard information and enables contactless payment.
Currently some 50 percent of cards issued by his bank have chips and all newissues are chip cards, he said.
"However, a large number of ATM cards issued in the past to meet thedemand for payment of salaries and cash withdrawals through ATMs are still incirculation. It takes time to convert them (into chip cards).”
Le Thanh Trung, deputy CEO of HDBank, said his bank has completed the systemupgrade and has been issuing chip cards, both contact and non-contact, sinceApril this year.
According to a Vietcombank spokesperson, all new cards have chips. The bank hasaround 14 million cards currently in use and it needs to convert 9.8 millioncards of them.
Tam said the cost of conversion would be huge since chip cards cost six timesthe price of magnetic cards.
Besides, banks have to contact each customer to ask them to switch to chipcards, which is difficult to do quickly, he said.
"And, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, many countries have closed theirborders, and so the import of equipment for the conversion has been delayed.Therefore, the State Bank of Vietnam should consider extending the deadline forthe conversion by another year."
Trung said: “The number of ATM cards issued is quite large, so it needs timeand meticulous planning for the conversion to ensure there is no inconvenienceto cardholders. Banks also have to prepare funds for the switch.”
According to the Vietnam Bank Card Association, only 10 percent of cards wereconverted into chip cards last year, which was slower than prescribed by theSBV. The central bank ordered banks to speed up the progress.
But the pandemic has posed challenges to carrying out the task, and theassociation plans to ask the central bank to delay the deadline by three to sixmonths.
Nguyen Dang Hung, deputy general director of the National Payment Corporationof Vietnam (Napas), said Napas is working closely with banks to carry out theconversion in accordance with the schedule set by SBV.
By the end of the first quarter of this year 26 banks including Vietcombank,Vietinbank, Agribank, Sacombank, and TPBank have completed the systemauthentication required for the conversion.
Besides reducing the risk of theft and fraud, chip cards can also store largeamounts of information, have an outstanding feature, the one-touch paymenttechnology, and can be used to pay for transport and public services.
Napas said it is working with public transport operators to test the use ofcontactless chip cards on buses, metro trains and others similar to their usein the UK and Singapore./.
VNA