Australian money changes: ‘Steve Irwin’s face should be put on currency instead of Prince Charles’

Some Aussies are calling for late national icon Steve Irwin to be impressed on the $5 note instead of King Charles III in the wake of Queen Elizabeth II’s death.

Her Royal Highness died aged 96 on Thursday, sparking a wave of mourning worldwide as Commonwealth nations honour Britain’s longest-serving monarch.

Her death after 70 years on the throne heralds a raft of changes that will come into place in Australia, including the introduction of bank notes and coins bearing the new king’s face.

But some Aussies have flocked online to demand other famous Australians instead be memorialised on the country’s legal tender when the printing press kicks into gear.

‘Time to replace Queen Elizabeth’s face on cash with Steve Irwin or Heath Ledger, I reckon,’ one woman Tweeted.

King Charles III will be printed on Australia’s $5 note and on the nation’s coins as he ascends the throne 

Some Aussies want Crocodile Hunter Steve Irwin to be inscribed on the $5 note instead of the new king. Pictured is a mock up of a $5 note with Steve Irwin's face on it

Some Aussies want Crocodile Hunter Steve Irwin to be inscribed on the $5 note instead of the new king. Pictured is a mock up of a $5 note with Steve Irwin’s face on it

Another said: ‘Can we get a petition to get Steve Irwin’s face on money in place of the queen going? It’s what we all want.’

‘Steve Irwin deserves our highest form of currency,’ someone else chimed.

‘The $5 note will explode in value if we put him on that note.’

However, other Aussies have offered alternative proposals, ranging from fictional characters to native animals, and even classic foods.

In a post on Reddit titled ‘RIP Queen Betty’, one man asked fellow Aussies for nominees to replace her Majesty on the $5 note, generating a flood of suggestions.

‘Alright…. now for the important s***,’ he said.

‘Who we gonna put on all our money? Because I can’t see that Charles on there. 

‘Maybe Steve Irwin, or Russell Coight? Throw us some ideas.’

One person put forth celebrated Australian sitcom characters Kath & Kim while one social media user advocated for Neighbours soap opera alum Alf Stewart.

Another proposed it should be inscribed with an Ibis, a native bird known in pop culture as a ‘bin chicken’ due to its tendency to ravage through garbage in urbanised areas due to depletion of its natural habitat along wetlands.

‘Just wanna see our nation’s proudest bird on our coins. The Bin Chicken,’ one person wrote. 

Steve Irwin, known as the Crocodile Hunter, died in September 2006 after being struck in the chest by a stingray barb

Steve Irwin, known as the Crocodile Hunter, died in September 2006 after being struck in the chest by a stingray barb

Another replied: ‘Considering the cultural history of Straya taking the p*** out of itself I completely support putting bin chickens on coins.’ 

Someone else put forth comedian Hamish Blake while another recommended TV personality Daryl Sommers.  

Other suggestions included a ‘pavlova’, ‘lamington’, ‘Bunnings snag’ or the State of Origin ‘maroons jersey’.

However, Australians will be waiting a while for new $5 banknotes showing an image of King Charles III, with the central bank noting that there will be ‘no immediate change to Australian banknotes’.

The Reserve Bank of Australia has confirmed King Charles III is expected to feature on a new $5 note.

‘The reigning monarch has traditionally appeared on the lowest denomination of Australian banknote,’ the RBA said.

However, the $5 banknotes featuring Queen Elizabeth II will also remain in circulation and will not be withdrawn.

The central bank, which manages the Australian currency and monetary policy said there would be further updates on currency changes to come.

The Australian coins of the future are likely to feature the head of King Charles III facing the opposite way to his late mother’s.

They will circulate alongside each other in a sort of mother-and-son currency double act.

A west-facing Charles III would continue a royal tradition, said to have started under Charles II from 1660, where the new monarch faces the opposite direction to their predecessor in their profile portrait on coins.

Since her coronation in 1953, six likenesses of Queen Elizabeth II have appeared on the obverse side of Australian coins, the last of them struck in 2018 and all facing right.

The Reserve Bank of Australia has confirmed King Charles III is expected to feature on a new $5 note but said Queen Elizabeth II bank notes will not be withdrawn

The Reserve Bank of Australia has confirmed King Charles III is expected to feature on a new $5 note but said Queen Elizabeth II bank notes will not be withdrawn

The only exception to the ‘about face’ convention was the coinage of Edward VIII, who insisted on his profile facing left.

‘It is not clear whether this was an expression of rebellion against convention, or vanity, to show what he regarded as his better profile, containing his hair parting,’ according to John Richardson, of Britain’s Open University.

Those involved in the lengthy and complex processes of producing Australia’s currency won’t say how quickly the image of King Charles might appear.

While the Australian Mint produces the nation’s coins, responsibility for all aspects of the production and issue of Australian banknotes rests with the Reserve Bank of Australia.

The Queen made the transition to decimal currency in 1966, when she first graced the now-discontinued $1 paper note, and has long featured on the $5 polymer note.

If Charles III does appear on notes any time soon, it’s a fair bet the planning started many moons ago because making money costs a lot of money – and time.

The RBA’s latest suite of polymer notes – called the NGB (Next Generation of Banknotes) program – took 10 years and $37 million to complete, ending with the $100 bill in 2020.

The notes are printed in Melbourne by the RBA’s wholly-owned subsidiary Note Printing Australia, and undergo no fewer than 13 production processes.

New $5 notes featuring King Charles’ head are likely to continue to bear some of the complex security traits of existing notes, including 3D and moving imagery, a tactile feature for the visually-impaired, colour changes, micro-printed lines from the constitution and fluorescence under UV light.

Coins are the responsibility of the Treasurer and are manufactured by the Royal Australian Mint. It has produced more than 15 billion coins since being opened by the new monarch’s late father, Prince Philip, in 1965.

Australia won’t be the only nation in the Commonwealth facing the prospect of introducing new designs on its coins and notes.

Queen Elizabeth II has appeared on the currency of more than 30 countries, the first being Canada’s $20 note in 1935, when she was only nine years old.

She is still likely to be in circulation somewhere, a century later, and well after her death which was announced on Friday at the age of 96.

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