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Radio
GaGa: 100 % Foreign Ownership in Satellite Radio Broadcasting
Mooted
The
Telecom Regulatory Authority of India ("TRAI") submitted
its recommendations on Satellite Radio Service ("SRS")
to the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting on June 27, 2005
advocating 100 per cent foreign ownership in satellite radio broadcasting.
TRAI proposed that the operation of SRS providers should be in
line with those of FM radio broadcasters.
TRAI's
salient recommendations include:
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No
entry fee should be imposed on SRS providers, either existing
or new as there is adequate supply of spectrum. In case of
excess demand for the available spectrum space, tenders may
be invited on the lines recommended for FM radio.
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A
single license for carriage should be issued, under which
the licensee itself would be responsible for content regulation.
There should be common rules for subscription as well as broadcast
type services.
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Licensing
should be on a case by case basis, primarily aimed at establishing
whether the applicant has the necessary financial and technical
capacity to execute the SRS project.
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The
license should be granted for a period of 10 years with a
provision for an automatic extension for five years unless
there are technical developments. ·
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No
annual license fee should be levied so long as terrestrial
repeaters are not permitted. Once terrestrial repeaters are
permitted a revenue share of 4 per cent of the gross revenue
generated in India should be imposed as has been recommended
for FM radio.
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A
limit of 15 per cent could be imposed on agency commission
for advertisements or collection of subscription.
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The
AIR Programme and Advertisement Codes should be made applicable
to SRS also.
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There
should be no ban on news and current affairs being broadcast
by satellite radio.
In
addition, TRAI proposed certain technical considerations including:
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A
particular transmission standard need not be mandated for
SRS providers and instead they should be free to decide their
own preferred transmission standard, subject to the approval
by the licensing authority.
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While
licensing, it should be made mandatory for SRS operators to
provide addressability to every subscriber, which is capable
of blocking unwanted channel or group of channels.
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Initially,
multi standard receivers which can be used with different
transmission standards need not be mandated for SRS operators.
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Foreign
ownership requirements for the terrestrial repeaters should
follow the same regulatory approach as SRS.
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Further,
terrestrial repeaters should be permitted only for the re-broadcast
of their signal from the satellite and should not be allowed
to broadcast locally inserted programmes.
TRAI
recommended that the government should encourage uplinking of
satellite radio channels from the country and evolve a common
uplinking and downlinking policy for both television and radio
taking into account all aspects including security. We expect
detailed guidelines on satellite radio broadcasting to be issued
by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting on the basis of
the TRAI recommendations soon.
Source:
TRAI
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Radio
GooGoo: Private FM Radio Broadcasting Phase 2 Announced
The
Government of India on June 30, 2005 announced the policy framework
for the second phase of private FM radio broadcasting, replacing
the existing licensing model with a revenue sharing regime.
Some
of the salient features of the second phase include:
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20
percent Foreign Direct Investment ("FDI"),
including FII and NRI investment, has been permitted in 330
stations located in 90 cities. Previously, FDI was not permitted
in FM radio broadcasting.
-
New
FM radio stations would have to pay a one-time entry fee that
would be decided through a closed bidding process, which each
successful bidder would pay according to his bid amount. The
existing operators would have to pay the average bid amount
of new players. According to the Union Minister for Information
and Broadcasting, Mr. S Jaipal Reddy, the bidding for the
second phase will start by the end of July.
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In
addition to the entry fee, the bidders will have to pay an
annual license fee of four percent of their annual revenue.
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Being
involved in any litigation would not constitute a ground to
blacklist any bidders.
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Private
FM radio stations will, primarily, be entertainment-oriented
as they will not be allowed to air any current affairs or
news content.
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Establishment
of a quasi-judicial body for regulating the private FM radio
sector has been proposed. It is not clear whether this quasi-judicial
body would only regulate FM radio or regulate other broadcasting
services too.
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To
prevent monopoly by a single operator, a company would not
be allowed to run two channels in the same city.
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In
the second phase, the cities would be divided into four broad
categories -- A, B, C and D -- starting from the metros and
flowing down to the smaller ones.
According
to the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, common infrastructure
for private FM channels will be set up in nine cities and a total
of 48 FM channels would be available for bidding by the private
sector on the common infrastructure network. Hyderabad and Bangalore
would have the highest number of FM radio channels available for
bidding at seven each, while Kolkata and Mumbai would have five
FM radio channels each.
The
new policy could prove to be just the right impetus required by
the ailing FM radio sector as the license fee regime adopted in
the first phase had 108 frequencies put on bid and only 21 are
operational, 2 of which have also been given notice to close down.
Source:
PIB / FICCI
You
can direct your queries or comments to Roshan
Thomas and Vikram
K Raj
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SUBSCRIPTION
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We
update our clients by sending various hotlines. You can
subscribe to one / more hotlines also. You can email
us for registering yourself for any of the hotlines given
below.
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Hotline
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Hotline |
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