GLS Bank, founded in Germany in 1974 at the beginning of the
The material it chose —
"Visually, haptic, it's exactly the same as a plastic card," said Alexander Schulz, senior advisor of payment transactions at GLS Bank. It chose to move its full debit portfolio to wood because the material is "recognizable, sustainable and an identifying mark for the bank," he said.
GLS, a small bank based in Bochum, Germany, caters to a European audience that rewards sustainability. It's at the forefront of a broader movement of financial institutions and companies in other industries — including
As a
Thus, it could not pass up the opportunity to replace its PLA cards — already a more expensive option than first-use plastic — with wood cards, even at triple the cost. "We are not driven by making money," though the card's distinctiveness does provide a marketing benefit, Schulz said.
"When you pay at the point of sale with a Timbercard, it creates a lot of talking and everybody asks, oh, is it real wood?" Schulz said. "Most people don't believe that it's a wood card."
The Timbercard is made by Copecto, a unit of DG Nexolution in Germany, and GLS began testing this product in September 2022 with 1,500 cards. It went into full production in October 2023, replacing PLA debit cards with wood as the old cards expire, and in that time GLS has converted 40,000 of its 300,000 debit cards to the new material. GLS also has about 132,000 PLA credit cards in circulation, but its German customers rarely use these except for travel or online purchases, and thus the credit portfolio is not a part of the bank's transition to wood.
The Timbercard itself is a mix of four layers of wood pressed together with a layer of paper to hold the copper wire antenna. Copecto uses an EMV chip and antenna provided by Thales, a French manufacturer.
A cubic meter of wood is enough to create 100,000 of these cards, according to GLS; this amount of wood grows naturally in Germany every three to four seconds, making the materials almost instantly renewable, according to the
Instead of painting over the cards with ink, GLS has its brand laser-etched into it, maintaining the look and feel of the wood it's made from (a mix of maple and sycamore). The only pop of color is a sticker for Mastercard's logo, since the card network insists that its logo must be in color (the bank is negotiating this point, Schulz said).
Even though the Timbercard is made almost entirely of biodegradable components, Schulz still advises users to find a recycling bin for their expired payment cards due to the metal elements that compose the antenna, EMV chip and magnetic stripe. In a later version, GLS hopes to remove at least the magstripe.
Another Timbercard issuer, a bank-owned company in Switzerland called Viseca, suggested that users could instead remove the metal components on their own and toss the card in a compost heap or the soil of a potted plant.
Either option is preferable to plastic. First-use plastic is produced from fossil fuels and contains
"The problem with plastic is the durability. It lasts extremely long, and even nature doesn't know how to get rid of it," Bedrija Hamza, senior innovation manager at Viseca, said in
GLS' choice to treat the Timbercard as a differentiator is consistent with the way that Thales, which makes the card's metal components, frames the product. Thales likens the card to one made entirely of metal, which issuers typically market as part of a premium account due to the material's cost.
Other banks that have switched away from plastic cards have reported similar reactions to what GLS has heard from his customers.
One example is the Bank of New Hampshire, which is a mutual bank, meaning it has an ownership structure that is comparable to that of GLS. And like the German bank, its customers are keenly interested in improving the environment.
Thus, when the $2.5 billion-asset bank began switching its plastic debit cards to PLA in 2022 — at a premium of 30 cents more than what it paid for first-use plastic — cardholders expressed more curiosity about the sustainable material than the underlying expense.
"Every time you talk to a customer about a biodegradable card made out of nonedible corn, it always gets people talking," said Eric Carter, the bank's digital solutions and innovations officer, in an
Judith Enck, former regional administrator with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and president of Beyond Plastics, characterized these banks as trendsetters.
"It is interesting to see this kind of leadership coming from banking cooperatives," Enck said. "We need them to lead the way and show other banks how it's done. I applaud their move and hope to see more initiatives like this in the banking sector."
Other issuers are creatively marketing their use of alternative materials. Last week, American Express began issuing a new version of its
On a broader scale, several banks have made long-term promises about replacing first-use plastic with recycled plastic or biodegradable alternatives.
And Mastercard will require all banks to
"I am encouraged to see banks moving away from PVC plastics and relying on alternatives to plastic, including wood," Enck said.