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Payments Association
of South Africa

EMV Fleet Migration

The journey towards fleet card security and payments innovation

Rising fraud and abuse, no cross-border acceptance, and isolation from advances in mainstream payment technologies and standards. These signal that magnetic stripe cards have reached the end of their useful life for South Africa’s modern fleet card issuers.

Transitioning to EMV

The EMV Fleet Migration project, a collaborative fleet industry initiative led by the Payments Association of South Africa (PASA), is dedicated to implementing a modernised fleet solution within the South African National Payment System (NPS). This initiative aims to facilitate the transition of fleet cards in South Africa to new-generation technology, specifically leveraging an international Chip and PIN standard. Our overarching objective is to establish a robust foundation for the fleet industry’s progression towards digitalisation.

The EMV Fleet Migration project is moving the country to globally trusted Chip-and-PIN technology, leveraging international specifications such as EMV, Conexxus, Mastercard and Visa standards with the economic benefits it promises. This means fleet cards will offer the same advantages as chip-based debit and credit cards while preserving rewards of enhanced data exclusive to the fleet market. The new fleet card aims to leverage super-advanced technology that will unlock additional security measures, reduce fraud, and enhance fleet information.

800,000 cards
Estimated fleet card market
(source: PASA)
5% - 12%
Estimated fraud on total fleet fuel spend
(source: PASA)

Transitioning to EMV

Slide

Modernisation – EMV Chip-and-PIN standards and processes take fleet spending to the cutting edge of modern convenience, assurance, and efficiency.
 
Stronger security – EMV chips use robust encryption to protect their data and a PIN is required to process payments; even if stolen, card data cannot be readily used or cloned.

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Watch the videos to learn more

Switching on the capabilities of the new EMV Chip and PIN fleet card

Understanding the Fleet Card Industry

Who benefits from the migration?

  • Information officers gain remote access to real-time transaction and trip data, enabling integration into their logistics management and control systems.
  • Logistics officers can reconcile fleet expenses against vehicle routes and trips more efficiently, improving their ability to track spending and costs.
  • Financial officers achieve greater control over fleet financials, as rampant card fraud and abuse become a thing of the past. With agreed-upon terms with the issuer, cross-border acceptance means drivers no longer need to carry cash.
  • Fuel merchants benefit from minimal chargebacks by playing a crucial role in validating transactions, and ensuring continued patronage from corporate fuel purchasers.
  • Fleet card issuers and acquiring banks experience streamlined systems integration, enhanced service delivery, and reduced administrative overhead.
  • Fleet entrepreneurs are empowered to develop innovative products and services that benefit stakeholders at all levels, from the forecourt to the boardroom.

Join us on the journey as we move towards a modernised and sustainable fleet card industry.
Contact us: emvfleet@pasa.org.za

Reference Information

EMV stands for Europay, Visa and Mastercard, which introduced the original Chip-and-PIN standards. Although some EMV cards still carry a magnetic stripe for fallback compatibility, their operation relies on an embedded computer chip. EMV fleet cards are also chip-enabled but their transactions are limited to nominated fleet vehicles or drivers and have additional processing requirements to provide enhanced data at purchases.

  • The adoption of secure EMV credit and debit cards at retail stores has forced criminals to focus on magnetic stripe fleet cards, which are highly susceptible to skimming and cloning.
  • A growing number of African countries are refusing South African fleet cards due to systems not being able to manage currency conversion, and their poor security and high risk.
  • Magnetic stripe technology falls short of modern payment standards that promote vendor interoperability, value-added data collection and product innovation.
  • South Africa’s fleets embrace advanced technologies, like IoT, AI, and data analytics, for levels of utility and assurance that the magnetic stripe standard cannot satisfy.
  • Information is encrypted on the chip, making it nearly impossible for criminals to skim, decode and clone.
  • Each payment is tokenised and can only be processed once, prohibiting the reuse of the same data in unauthorised transactions.
  • Mandatory entry of a PIN and other additional fleet data information ensures lost or stolen cards cannot be used by anyone not possessing this information.
  • Unauthorised vehicles cannot be refuelled by the cardholder or others, mitigating card abuse.
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