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Next, a scientist to feature on UK’s £50 note

Submissions can be made until December 14 and the selected one revealed next year



Britain’s Governor of the Bank of England, Mark Carney, speaks during a news conference to launch the character selection process for the new £50 note at the Science Museum in London, Britain.
Image Credit: REUTERS

London: A scientist or mathematician will feature on Britain’s next £50 banknote, the Bank of England (BoE) Governor Mark Carney has said, inviting the public to make their suggestions over the next six weeks.

The £50 is Britain’s highest-denomination banknote in general circulation and is rarely used in day-to-day transactions by Britons, who prefer credit and debit cards for higher value purchases.

Scientists who have previously featured on British banknotes include physicist Isaac Newton and naturalist Charles Darwin.

Britons can submit suggestions for who should succeed them via the BoE’s website until December 14. BoE officials, assisted by four scientists, will then decide a shortlist and Carney will announce the successful design next year.

The existing banknote features engineer James Watt and his business partner Matthew Boulton, who developed and marketed the steam engine in the late 18th century.

“I am delighted that the new £50 (note) will celebrate the UK’s contribution to science. There is a wealth of individuals whose work has shaped how we think about the world,” Carney said.

Under Carney, the BoE has introduced plastic or “polymer” banknotes, which were common in his native Canada. The first British polymer banknote, featuring Second World War leader Winston Churchill on the £5 note, entered circulation in September 2016.

Britain’s government said last month that the new £50 note would also be a polymer design, which is more durable and harder to counterfeit than paper money. There are currently 330 million £50 notes in circulation, with a combined value of £16.5 billion ($21.5 billion).

The announcement that Churchill would feature on the £5 note, replacing 19th century social reformer Elizabeth Fry, raised the prospect that Queen Elizabeth II would be the only woman featured on British banknotes.

The BoE subsequently said that the 19th century novelist Jane Austen would appear on the new plastic £10 note which it launched last year. Some vegetarian and religious groups have objected to the polymer notes because trace amounts of animal fat are used in their production.

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