Two issues ago we discussed the State Mints of Baden-Wuerttemberg, and their unusual 5 Euro polymer-ring coin. Here is a press release about the coin's award from the
International Association of Currency Affairs. -Editor
Polymer Coin Wins IACA Award for Best Coin Innovation
The IACA Excellence in Currency 2017 Coin Awards were conferred during The Coin Conference in Warsaw on October 24, 2017. The State Mints of Baden-Wuerttemberg and the Bavarian State Mint were
awarded the prize for Best Coin Innovation for their coin featuring a polymer ring.
Every two years, the International Association of Currency Affairs bestows the distinguished IACA Excellence in Currency Awards. On October 24, 2017, a German product was thus recognized: the
tri-material 5-euro coin with polymer ring was labelled ‘Best Coin Innovation’.
The idea
Thanks to the polymer ring inserted between the ring and the core, a coin becomes as secure as a banknote for the very first time. The colored polymer ring is not only attractive but also constitutes
an overt security feature that is easily discernible for every user. At the same time, if offers the possibility to equip the coin with covert security features which no counterfeiter is able to copy
at the present state of the art. The new polymer coin would thus make an ideal material for raising the coin-note- boundary. This is an important issue as various countries currently contemplate
raising this boundary.
The IACA Excellence in Currency Award
The International Association of Currency Affairs (IACA) that presents the IACA Excellence in Currency Awards every other year is an organization that unites central banks and ministries of finance,
mints, security printing companies, and many more institutions and companies involved in the cash payment cycle. Composed of experts, an international jury decides every two years which nomination
should be recognized with an award. In contrast to the more widely-known COTY (= Coin of the Year Award), the IACA Excellence in Currency Award exclusively focuses on circulation coins and
concentrates on solutions that are ground-breaking for the entire minting industry.
International recognition for a German idea
This constitutes already the second prize of the professional world with which the polymer coin can adorn itself. In 2016 it won the MDC Award in the category ‘Technologically Most Advanced
Circulating Coin’. The Mint Directors Conference (MDC) is composed of representatives of mints from all around the globe.
The developers
The German State Mints of Baden-Wuerttemberg and the Bavarian State Mints were at the forefront of developing this creation. They were supported by the Leibniz Institute at the Rheinisch-Westfälische
Technische Hochschule (RWTH) in Aachen as well as by representatives of the German Bundesbank. Further major contributors to this development were the vending industry through a representative of
Crane Payment Innovations at Buxtehude and representatives of the blank supplier Saxonia EuroCoin.
To read the earlier E-Sylum article, see:
THE STATE MINTS OF BADEN-WUERTTEMBERG (http://www.coinbooks.org/v20/esylum_v20n49a32.html)
Wayne Homren, Editor
The Numismatic Bibliomania Society is a non-profit organization
promoting numismatic literature. See our web site at coinbooks.org.
To submit items for publication in The E-Sylum, write to the Editor
at this address: whomren@gmail.com
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