Tapping at the Pumps to Pay: Russian Telco and Oil Company to Launch Service
Russia’s largest mobile operator, MTS, and its second largest oil company, Lukoil, plan to enable consumers to pay at the gasoline pumps with a tap of their phones.
The service will be commercialized next month in the city of Perm, according to Germany-based Giesecke & Devrient, which said it is producing the special SIM cards for the project. The SIMs appear to come with flexible antennas that subscribers could use to enable a variety of phones with a contactless or NFC interface. The parties plan to expand the service to full NFC phones, when available.
To pay for gasoline, users will tap their phones against card readers on pumps. The amount will be debited via an electronic-cash feature on MTS SIM cards, according to G&D.
The card vendor, which is working with Russian smart card provider Sitronics Smart Technologies, said that MTS and Lukoil have trialed the service using and older NFC phone, the Nokia 6131 along with SIMs connected with flexible antennas.
About a year ago, MTS launched a trial of mobile transit ticketing with the Moscow Metro. It also participated in trial of mobile ticketing with airport shuttle operator Aeroexpress. Both trials involved SIMs connected to flexible antennas.