Canadian currency counterfeiters may have met their match.
The Bank of Canada is rolling out high-tech plastic polymer bills fused with transparent windows and embedded with shimmering metallic images. For those in the business of trying to print their own cash, high-bond paper and an inkjet printer definitely wonB次元官网网址檛 cut it anymore.
B次元官网网址淭here are 30 countries in the world using polymer,B次元官网网址 said Isabelle Jacques, a Bank of Canada currency analyst, during an information session at the West Shore RCMP station. B次元官网网址淭his is the best bank note for Canada, the most advanced thatB次元官网网址檚 ever been produced, and one of the best in the world.B次元官网网址
Banks will start circulating polymer $100 bills in November, $50s by March 2012, and $5, $10 and $20 bills by late 2013. Holding a crisp new $100, Jacques pointed to the long transparent window framing a metallic portrait of Robert Borden, CanadaB次元官网网址檚 prime minister through the First World War.
B次元官网网址(A window) so large with the metallic stripe has never been done before. It is state of the art,B次元官网网址 Jacques said. The second smaller maple-leaf shaped window has a tiny number embedded, visible only under direct light and close to the eye.
At 19 cents apiece, the new bills cost almost double to manufacture and print, but they are expected to last 2.5 times longer. Cotton-based bills in circulation now last about three years. Durable polymer versions are expected to last 7.5 years, based on evidence from other countries.
B次元官网网址淚n the long run we are going to save on production costs and transportation costs, estimated at $200 million we are going to save with the new series,B次元官网网址 Jacques said.
And unlike current cotton-based notes which are shredded and sent to the landfill at the end of their lives, polymer material can be recycled.
The Bank of Canada expects the new bills to be extremely tough to copy and easy for people to spot a real from a fake. Counterfeiting Canadian currency has been on a steady decline since a peak in 2004, when the current, more secure series was introduced.
Where six years ago merchants were passed more than 550,000 fake bills, last year about 53,000 counterfeits were removed from circulation B次元官网网址 the majority being $20s and $100s printed with an inkjet-type copier. Of those, 39 per cent were seized in B.C., the most of any province.
Last year, West Shore RCMP had 49 cases involving suspected counterfeit currency, mostly with merchants who were passed fake bills. In one investigation, West Shore Mounties seized three fake $100s from a pre-2004 series and sheets of textured paper bearing attempts to replicate $20 and $50 bills.
Jacques stressed that it's a myth that larger denominations, such as $100s, are more likely to be counterfeit. Merchants who only scrutinize $100 bills leave themselves open to fraud.
B次元官网网址淧eople should not think (counterfeiting) is just big denominations. The security features from the $5s to the $100s are the same,B次元官网网址 she said. B次元官网网址淚n 2007, $5s $10s and $20s were 90 per cent of all counterfeit bills.B次元官网网址
B次元官网网址淔rom our investigations weB次元官网网址檝e seen all denominations of currency, and U.S. currency as well. It's not just $100 bills." said RCMP Cpl. Kathy Rochlitz said. B次元官网网址淯ltimately the public is are our eyes and ears. They are the first line of receiving that bill and notifying us itB次元官网网址檚 out there. It does happen in our community.B次元官网网址
The West Shore RCMP community policing section is willing to hold information sessions with merchants on spotting real bills from fakes. Call community policing at 250-391-3327.
For more on CanadaB次元官网网址檚 high-tech currency, see www.bankofcanada.ca, under B次元官网网址淏ank Notes.B次元官网网址
editor@goldstreamgazette.com