New Currency in Costa Rica

One thousand colones bill.

One thousand colones bill.

Costa Rica is not only well known for being a popular beach and eco-adventure vacation destination; currency collectors, also known as ‘notaphiles’, have long held Costa Rica’s bank note design in high esteem. The latest editions will not disappoint them. 

On Monday, June 20th 2011, the Central Bank of Costa Rica put the new  ₡​ 1.000 and  ₡​ 2.000 bank notes into circulation.  The introduction of these new notes coincided with the 60th anniversary of the Central Bank of Costa Rica.  Costa Rica is in the process of issuing a whole new series of beautiful colored notes.  On one side will be a famous Costa Rican and on the opposite side there will be representations of different ecosystems and fauna.

For those of you unfamiliar with the money in Costa Rica, it is termed the Colon or plural Colones after Christopher Columbus, known in Spanish as Cristóbal Colón.  The colon is represented by a ₡​ (a cent sign with two slashes).

The exchange rate varies daily but a general rule of thumb that I use is to divide the colones by 500 to get the rate in dollars.  The exact exchange rate appears daily in La Nacion, the largest Costa Rican newspaper, in the economía section.  As of Friday, August 12, 2011, the exchange rate at which the dollar was being bought was ₡​ 498.88 and the rate at which the dollar was being sold was ₡​ 509.73.

So the ₡​1,000 note is approximately worth $2.00. In the older currency this was a red bank note and was give the nickname “rojo” because of the red color. They kept the primary color of the ₡​ 1,000 red.  However, the new currency features the Costa Rican Head of State, Braulio Carrillo on the front.  Braullio Carrillo was Costa Rica’s president twice during the 1830s. He helped promote the country’s agricultural economy and built the highway linking San José to the Caribbean coast.  That highway now intersects the Braullio Carrillo National Park, which is one of the most visited National Parks in the country.

On the back of the note the eco system depicted is of the dry forest.  A Guanacaste tree, a national symbol of Costa Rica appears.  A deer grazes next to a pitaya (the plant that produces dragon fruit), more cactus flowers and four scorpions appear.  Among several security features is a translucent leaf-shaped watermark that changes from red to gold.

The new notes were printed by the French company, Oberthur Technologies and the 1,000 colones is made of polypropylene, a plastic that is three times as durable as the current cotton fiber paper.  They are also considered more secure.

To assist the visually impaired, all of the notes are different in size.  Another feature is the notes are designed to include embossed dots around the number and face so that they are easily distinguishable by touch.

On the ₡​1,000 note is a circle with the words “Estado de Costa Rica”.  This has raised a great deal of concern among the citizens of Costa Rica and may require the bill to be reprinted.  Costa Rica does not have states, they are a republic.  They speculate that someone is selling them out and perhaps making them a state of Mexico or the U.S.   Certainly if the bills are reprinted, the current ₡​1,000 note will become a collector’s item.

Two thousand colones bill.

Two thousand colones bill.

The ₡​2,000 note, worth approximately $4.00 was also printed by Oberthur Technologies using their Motion windowed security thread. The ₡​2,000 note is blue and features Mauro Fernández Acuña, a Costa Rican politician in the late 1800s who played major roles in the judiciary and the Legislative Assembly.  He is largely credited with reforming the country’s educational system.  With him on the front is the Colegio Superior de Señoritas building in San Jose. This prestigious girl’s school was founded in 1888, and was one of the first in a series of institutions implemented by the government to help make higher education more available.  This building completed in 1892 and the neighboring Vitalia Madrigal School were declared a national heritage site on July 11, 1988.

On the reverse side of the ₡​2,000 note Costa Rica’s coral reef ecosystem appears.  This features a bull shark, star fish, sea turtles and slimy sea plumes.

On Sept. 1, the old ₡1,000 bill and ₡2,000 bill will no longer have a value.  They will still be able to be redeemed at branches and agencies of local banks.  By Nov. 1, the old notes can solely be exchanged at the Central Bank headquarters in downtown San José.

For more information on Costa Rican money, visit the El Museo de Numismática.

Costa Rica Plans High Tech Future and Looks for Foreign Investment

Photo of President Chinchilla.

Photo courtesy of the U.S. Embassy in Costa Rica.

President of Costa Rica, Laura Chinchilla addressed Stanford’s Graduate School of Business as part of the Global Speaker Series on May 17, 2011, during her six day visit to the United States. Chinchilla, the first female president of Costa Rica, received her undergraduate degree from the University of Costa Rica and her Master’s degree in Public Policy from Georgetown University.

Chinchilla told the students that Costa Rica is striving to be a mecca for ecotourism as well as high-technology business.

In reviewing Costa Rica’s history and strengths she pointed out that Costa Rica abolished their military 62 years ago, limited presidents to one term and has invested in peace, education, health, environmental protection and sustainable economic development.  Further she pointed out that Costa Rica is one of the three safest nations in Latin America, boasts a broad middle class society and has one of the highest literacy rates in the world of nearly 95 %.

More than 90 percent of the nation’s electricity comes from renewable sources and Costa Rica has publicly declared that they will be the world’s first carbon neutral country.

Costa Rica is also making major strides to have a well-trained adult population. They plan by 2017 to have all high school students be bilingual in English and Spanish. Chinchilla also shared that the country is starting 90 technical schools to train students for high-tech jobs.

Costa Rica sees itself a country that is friendly to foreigners.  Costa Rica is the number three recipient of foreign investment in Latin America.  Chinchilla is encouraging investment from abroad, albeit ecologically.  “Both can go together.  I don’t think you have to sacrifice sustainability.”

Chinchilla has taken some firm stands including not continuing to promote Costa Rica’s mining industry.   ”We felt these types of extractive industries do not go along with the type of development we are trying to promote…. It was better to take this radical decision instead of sending confusing messages to investors. What’s important is to be very clear about the kind of development you want, and then to promote the regulatory framework to implement those rules.”

Costa Rica now exports 4,000 products marketed to 150 countries.  It is now home to manufacturing or research facilities run by Intel and HP.  More than 200 leading firms in manufacturing, life science and other areas are working in Costa Rica.  Costa Rica currently ranks as the second largest exporter of computer software in Latin America.  The country boasts a dozen free trade agreements.  According to Chinchilla these agreements “grant our products preferential access to the largest world markets, including the U.S., the European Union and China.

Chinchilla states that Costa Rica has achieved its prosperity “through peace, freedom, and the rule of law.”

In closing her speech, Chinchilla accepted questions from the students.  One student asked what advice she could give to Stanford students looking for personal success.

“Probably the most important thing in life is trying to have very strong convictions. If you don’t believe in what you are doing, it’s very hard to be successful.”

Also, she advised, success is never an individual effort: “So, what is good for you also has to be good for the rest of the people.”

You can watch the video of President Chinchilla’s entire speech.

Costa Rica to become Carbon Neutral by 2021

Windmills near Lake Arenal.  Photo by Donald Farris.

Windmills near Lake Arenal. Photo by Donald Farris.

In February of 2008, Nobel Prize Winning President Oscar Arias set an incredibly ambitious goal for Costa Rica: to become Carbon Neutral by 2021.  Costa Rica has decided to act unilaterally and to give themselves only 13 years to achieve this goal. Costa Rica has established this goal as a priority in Costa Rica’s National Development and they plan to design an integrated climate change strategy that can be replicated in countries with similar characteristics.

While this is a worthwhile goal, one has to question, can they do it?  I’m not sure, but as Sergio Musmanni, says, “If any country can do it, it’s Costa Rica”. Mr. Musmanni, having gained his B.S. in Organic and Industrial Chemistry from the University of Costa Rica, went on to achieve his Masters and Doctorate in Industrial Chemistry from the University of Texas at Dallas.  Since that time, he has been working with the Government of Costa Rica on climate change and sustainability.
Mr. Musmainni states,  “We have been at the forefront of the climate change issue for years. A large percentage of our electricity… already comes from renewable energy sources. And we are in the tropics. We don’t have problems heating up our homes and buildings during the winter.

You see signs of the efforts to become carbon neutral everywhere you go in Costa Rica.  Costa Rica combined their ministries of energy and environment in the 1970’s and an amazing 99% of their electrical energy comes from renewable sources. The Arenal Dam provides the country with hydroelectric power, large municipal windmills generate electricity and solar is becoming more popular.

The most challenging aspect of this goal lies with transportation.  But in this challenge, the government of Costa Rica is not alone.  Companies like Nature Air are at the forefront of this revolution.  They were the first airline in the world to become carbon neutral.  Sansa, the other Costa Rican airline has followed suit and it is carbon neutral as well.  Many tour operators are also claiming to be carbon neutral.

One of the ways that transportation companies are achieving this goal is with planting trees to offset the carbon they use.  The theory is that if enough trees are planted, they will absorb enough carbon dioxide to cancel out the emission.  Costa Rica has reversed deforestation of the land and currently forests cover twice as much land as it did twenty years ago.

Nature Air chief executive Alex Khajavi  states quite articulately what most Costa Rican citizens feel, “We are in the right position in this country to be the crucible for the changes that the rest of the world is looking for. We cannot let it fail. We need to get everyone on our side to make this small experiment in something very radical but very necessary, to work,” he said.

“We need to be an example to the rest of the world”.