BSEC- FRANCE- BRAF Seminar
Istanbul, BSEC Headquarters, 3 December 2012
“New Audiovisual Broadcasting Technologies and the New Economic Models Arising from Them“
SUMMARY
1. The BSEC-France-BRAF Seminar “New Audiovisual Broadcasting Technologies and the New Economic Models Arising from Them“ was held at the BSEC Headquarters in Istanbul on 3 December 2012. 2. The event was attended by the representatives from the Republic of Armenia, Republic of Azerbaijan, Romania, Republic of Turkey, French Republic and the Black Sea Broadcasting Regulatory Authorities Forum (BRAF). The List of Participants is attached as Annex I. 3. The participants were welcomed by H.E. Mr. Victor TVIRCUN, Secretary General of BSEC PERMIS, H.E. Mr. Serge SMESSOV, Ambassador in charge of cooperation between the EU and BSEC, Mr. Hamit ERSOY, Secretary General of BRAF, and Mr. Hervé MAGRO, Consul General of the French Republic in Istanbul.
4. The seminar was held in four sessions on different aspects of digital transition allowing its participants to overview the present state of affairs, legal, technical and financial aspects of the analog switch-off as well as to exchange experience on the best practices used and to discuss the prospects of cooperation in the field. 5. Mr. Jean-Bernard GRAMUNT, International Manager, DTT and ICT Cluster Expert from Ministry of Renewal Economy of the French Republic, made a presentation on the developments with regard to digital terrestrial television (DTT). He informed the delegations that the switchover from analogue to digital standard is a global movement impacting all technologies in the information society. Amongst the different technical standards, DVB-T is the most largely used. 6. The speaker also briefed the participants that, according to the GE06 Agreement of 16 June 2006 they agreed on, the analogue transmission using UHF band (470-862 MHz) should be stopped at the latest by 17 June 2015, and those using VHF band (174-230 MHz) by 17 June 2020. Most of the European countries have already or are about to complete their DSO before the end of 2012. Japan, USA and many countries in the world have finished deployment. African countries work hard to achieve the target before 17 June 2015. The Latin America is late. Brazil had postponed its initial objective (2016). Other countries plan to do so in 2018-2020. The Asian countries are at different stages, but some, as Thailand, have increased their pass on the issue. The presentation is attached as Annex II.
7. Mr. Frédéric BOKOBZA, Head of Division, Development of Economy of Culture, Ministry of Culture and Communication of the French Republic, made a presentation about
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the legislative framework adaptation to digital transition and convergence, content policy and offer widening. 8. He also emphasized that France had shared its experience regarding the planning and launch of Digital terrestrial television (DTT) as well as the organisation of the analog switch-off (ASO) with a number of states. Both operations required a significant amount of preparation and legislative framework adaptations. The ASO, in particular, proved to be a politically very sensitive process, which required a number of successive modifications of the law in order to fine-tune its provisions and ensure the support of all stakeholders (politicians, companies, population). An appropriate and detailed information and help (including on-site support and financial subsidies for some) was crucial in the process. This enabled both to respect the planning, which had been defined by law more than 4 years in advance, and to spend significantly less public money than initially foreseen. 9. Moreover, the whole process has boosted the TV sets markets for several years and the digital dividend has brought around 2,6 billion euros to the State budget. The DTT platform, which is a key in terms of contribution to audiovisual original European production, faces new challenges in the years to come: adopting new, more efficient technical standards, completing the transition to HDTV, preparing for a potential second digital divide, facing connected TV, etc. The presentation is attached as Annex III. 10. Mr. Taha YÜCEL, Deputy President, Radio and Television Supreme Council, made a presentation on impacts of convergence on audio-visual media services. He noted that during the recent years new technologies have aroused in audio-visual media services. This has led to convergence of broadcasting, information and communication sectors. New technologies such as IPTV, WebTV, Mobile TV and OTT were discussed in addition to older terrestrial, cable and satellite transmission platforms. Basically, Internet use in the world, EU and Turkey is dramatically increasing especially in the sector of online videos. The trend shows that while online videos are booming, traditional broadcast images are declining. Global pay TV and on-demand values are increasing. The presentation is attached as Annex IV. 11. Mr. David MOUEN, Marketing Manager, Digital Terrestrial TV Solutions, Thomson Video Networks, made a presentation on Cluster Images and Networks as well as DTT value chain. He informed the delegations that this project comprises 232 organizations: large companies involved in multiple DTV topics, small companies focusing on dedicated topic, universities, engineering schools, and public research labs. The presentation highlighted the funding and innovations projects managed by the cluster. The speaker also gave some details on ImaginLab, a test bed and a Living Lab part of the Cluster Images & Networks. 12. The second part of the presentation dealt with details on the DTTV value chain, recall the new services and benefits expected from a DTTV network, expose 2 case studies (Sweden and Azerbaijan), explained the evolution of the compression codecs (from MEG-2 to HEVC) and position DVB-T versus DVB-T2. After DTTV Roll-Out Scenarios members of the Cluster Images & Networks were positioned in the DVB-T/T2 value chain. The presentation is attached as Annex V. 13. Mr. Jean-Louis ROUVIÈRE, Head of the TV Planning Department, Supreme Audiovisual Council, presented the role of the French regulator in the preparation and implementation periods for the analogue switch-over. Some key points were provided covering both periods:
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• the possibility to receive the DTT programs on a freeview satellite platform, which may be a good complement to terrestrial coverage;
• the frequency planning activities in order to avoid multiple frequency plans, the value of the guard interval for SFN networks and the necessity of coordination with neighbouring countries should be carefully studied;
• a coordination between the broadcasters is sometimes necessary, in order to implement in a coherent way the plan;
• local difficulties after the switch over may occur, should be treated swiftly, and may need to adjust the frequency plan, especially if it is an SFN network.
Furthermore, some insights concerning the new opportunities and next steps for digital television, were provided such as interactive services, or migration to new standards (MPEG4/HEVC, DVB-T2). The presentation is attached as Annex VI.
14. Ms. Eve-Lise BLANC-DELEUZE, DTT Manager, Canal France International, and Jean-Bernard GRAMUNT, International Manager, Ministry of Renewal Economy, made a presentation on the French DTT transition guide. Taking into account the complexity of DSO which at the same time is a major national project that could potentially bring about considerable growth, the speakers had prepared a Practical Guidelines to the Digital Switch Over. 15. This handbook can be used as the basis for or to supplement the national document that each country is required to draw up in order to enhance the overall visibility of the process and mobilise all those involved. This pragmatic guide can be adapted for use in each individual country and offers solutions drawn from a wide variety of experiences. It is aimed to help to overcome regulatory, political, technological and economic challenges. Since it addresses the main issues, this Handbook can be used by all parties involved - the government, regulatory bodies, service providers, civil society and the private sector, along with the relevant regional and international organisations – to gain a clear picture and better understanding of the challenges and objectives. The covered topics are:
• digital political switchover issues: whilst part of a wider project on a global scale, the digital transition is primarily the culmination of a national strategy;
• technical issues by dividing up the work to be carried out;
• legislative and regulatory issues addressing over 30 different points including organisational and DSO management;
• communication which should be undertaken and help scheme;
• business plan (transition costs assessment and how to fund them). 16. The speakers also informed the delegations on the methods of calculating and evaluating specific digital transition cost and potential funding including assessment of the digital dividend value. Their presentations are attached as Annex VII and Annex VIII. 17. Mr. Laurent de MERCEY, Deputy Director, Digital Economy Department, International Technical Assistance Agency of the French Economy (ADETEF), presented an overview of the ADETEF activities, the ways it interacts with its public and private partners
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in order to take part in tendered projects funded by international donors, and its main intervention zones, which include the BSEC Member States. 18. Further on, the speaker presented the instruments of the regional and external policies of the European Union, which could support the projects linked to the switching to digital television in the BSEC member states. These instruments were established for the period 2007-2013 and are subject to renewal for the period 2014-2020. They consist in the structural funds for the EU member states (regional policy), the Instrument for Pre-Accession Assistance (IPA) for the candidate countries (enlargement policy) and the European Neighbourhood and Partnership Instrument (ENPI), which includes the Eastern partnership, for several partner countries among which six BSEC member states (neighbourhood policy).
The importance of the role of the European Union delegations in the BSEC member
states for supplying information on the funding opportunities and procedures, for tendering and contracting was stressed. Innovative tools for funding EU member states experts such as TAIEX were mentioned, as well as the possibility to receive additional investment support from donors such as the European Investment Bank and the World Bank. The presentation is attached as Annex IX. 19. During the Seminar its participants had a fruitful exchange of views and of an experience on the presented topics. They expressed their common view that the Seminar provided a good base for evaluation of present international trends on the analogue to digital switchover, its perspectives and possible cooperation in the field. They also expressed their gratitude to the Government of the French Republic, the Forum of the Black Sea Broadcasting Regulatory Authorities Forum and BSEC for organization of the Seminar and excellent arrangement made for it.
Annex I
BSEC- FRANCE- BRAF SEMINAR “NEW AUDIOVISUAL BROADCASTING TECHNOLOGIES AND
THE NEW ECONOMIC MODELS ARISING FROM THEM“
Istanbul, 3 December 2012
LIST OF PARTICIPANTS
NAME / SURNAME
TITLE / POSITION /
INSTITUTION CHAIRMAN / MODERATOR
- Eve Lise BLANC DELEUZE
- DTT Manager, Canal France International Tel: + 33 140 62 3269 E-mail: [email protected]
REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA
- Sahak DAVTYAN - Deputy Director General, Television and Broadcasting Network of Armenia Tel: + 374 10 65 28 45 Fax: +374 10 65 35 52 E-mail: [email protected]
- Mikhail VARDANYAN - Acting Permanent Representative of the Republic of Armenia to the Organization of BSEC Tel & Fax:+90 212 225 67 59 E-mail: [email protected]
REPUBLIC OF AZERBAIJAN
- Nurshiravan MAHARRAMOV
- Chairman, National Television and Radio Council Tel: + 994 12 493 09 13 Fax: + 994 12 498 76 68 E-mail: [email protected]
- Fazil NOVRUZOV - Senior Advisor, Department of Law and International Relations, National Television and Radio Council Tel: + 994 12 493 09 13 Fax: + 994 12 498 76 68 E-mail: [email protected]
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ROMANIA
- Rasvan POPESCU - President, National Audiovisual Council Tel : + 40 21 305 53 56 Fax : + 40 21 305 53 56 E-mail : [email protected]
- Rodica ANGHEL - Media Regulations Councilor, National Audiovisual Council Tel : + 40 21 305 53 59 Fax : + 40 21 305 53 56 E-mail : [email protected]
REPUBLIC OF TURKEY
- Taha YÜCEL - Deputy President, Radio and Television Supreme Council Tel : + 90 312 297 50 91 Fax : + 90 312 266 19 64 E-mail : [email protected]
- Erdem ÇAKMAK -Expert, Radio and Television Supreme Council Tel : + 90 312 297 53 00 Fax : + 90 312 266 19 64 E-mail : [email protected]
- Tuncay YÜREKLİ
Deputy Head, TRT Television Department Tel : + 90 312 463 24 00 Fax : + 90 312 463 52 06 E-mail : [email protected]
- Gökçen ARDIÇ - Representative, TRT Çocuk Channel Tel : + 90 212 259 72 75 E-mail : [email protected]
- Kubilay KESKİN - General Manager, Anten Company Tel: + 90 212 217 46 52 Fax: + 90 212 217 46 56 E-mail: [email protected]
FRENCH REPUBLIC
- Serge SMESSOW - Ambassador in charge of cooperation between the EU and BSEC Tel : + 33 01 53 69 30 46 Fax : + 33 01 53 69 32 32 E-mail : [email protected]
- Frederic BOKOBZA - Head of Division, Development of
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Economy of Culture, Ministry of Culture and Communication Tel: + 33 1 40 15 33 95 E-mail: [email protected]
- Nicolas SANSON - Coordinator for Europe and Asia, Canal France International Tel: + 33 1 40 62 32 62 E-mail: [email protected]
- Laurent de MERCEY - Deputy Director, Digital Economy Department Tel : + 33 1 531 82 341 Fax : + 33 1 531 83 879 E-mail : [email protected]
- Jean Bernard GRAMUNT
- International Manager, Ministry of Renewal Economy Tel : + 33 1 449 72 877 E-mail : [email protected]
- David MOUEN - Marketing Manager, Digital Terrestrial TV Solutions, Thomson Video Networks Tel: + 33 02 99 28 53 06 Fax: + 33 02 99 28 50 54 E-mail: [email protected]
- Jean-Louis ROUVIÈRE - Head of the TV Planning Department, Supreme Audiovisual Council E-mail: [email protected]
- Herve MAGRO - Consul General of the French Republic in Istanbul Tel : + 90 212 334 87 48 E-mail : [email protected]
- Fanny Aubert MALAURIE
- Regional Audiovisual Attaché, Consulate General of the French Republic in Istanbul Tel : + 90 212 334 87 48 E-mail : [email protected]
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BRAF - Hamit ERSOY - Secretary General Tel : + 90 312 297 51 31 Fax : + 90 312 266 19 64 E-mail : [email protected]
- Hüseyin DEMİRBİLEK - Expert Tel : + 90 312 297 53 53 Fax : + 90 312 266 19 64 E-mail : [email protected]
BSEC PERMIS
- Victor TVIRCUN - Ambassador, Secretary General Tel: + 90 212 229 63 30 – 35 Fax : + 90 212 229 63 36 E-mail : [email protected] ; [email protected] www.bsec-organization.org
- Aliosha NEDELCHEV - Ambassador, Deputy Secretary General
- Yevgen KOZIY
- Project Coordinator, Assistant to the Secretary General
- Petrit BUSHATI - Executive Manager
- Valeria KOLOS - Secretary
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Overview about DTT in the world
Istanbul, December 3rd 2012
SOMMAIRE
• DTT, a world Challenge.
• Broadcasting standards
• DVB
• And the winner is ...
• Implementation of DTT in the world
• Why ASO is important?
• Where are you in the process ?
DTT – A world challenge
• The switchover from analogue to digital is a global movement impacting all technologies in the information society. It has been achieved in telecommunications, music, photography and pictures; it is under way in television, while radio is lagging behind.
• But also a political obligation for countries of ITU zone 1: GE06 Agreement of 16 June 2006, signatory countries agreed to stop analog transmission using UHF (470-862 MHz) by 17 June 2015, and VHF (174-230 MHz) by 17 June 2020.
Broadcasting standards
According to the ITU-R BT.1306-6 (12/2011) recommendations, Error-correction, data framing, modulation and emission methods for digital terrestrial television broadcasting, there are four systems.
• The ATSC standard, single carrier system, was initially developed for US broadcasters by the Advanced Television System Committee (ATSC), and was also selected by Canada, Mexico, Korea and Honduras.
• The ISDB-T (Integrated Services Digital Broadcasting - Terrestrial) standard has become the Japanese standard. It uses OFDM and MPEG2.
• The SBTVD-T (Sistema Brasileiro de Televisão Digital - Terrestrial) is based on ISDB-T + MPEG4 + GINGA. This version was also chosen by many Latin American governments.
• The DTMB (Digital Terrestrial Multimedia Broadcasting) standard was adopted by the People's Republic of China
And DVB
• The DVB-T standard (Digital Video Broadcasting - Terrestrial), an OFDM one, comes from the DVB Project produced by :
the EBU (European Broadcasting Union), ETSI (European Telecommunications Standards Institute) and CENELEC (European Committee for Electrotechnical Standardization).
It h b l t d t d d b b t i f th• It has been selected as a standard by member countries of the CEPT (Conference of European Post and Telecommunications) and as a benchmark standard for planning at the World Radiocommunication Conference in 2006.
• Two main versions DVB-T (MPEG2 / MPEG4) and DVB-T2 (MPEG4).
• DVB is an open standard, managed by an association of more than 289 stakeholders. This standard, and its later variants, have been adopted by many countries in the three ITU regions.
And the winner is DVB!
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Implementation of DTT in the world
• In EU many countries have deployed DTT and completed their ASO. For others, ASO deadline is December 2012.
• Japan, USA and many countries in the world have finished deployment.
• African countries work hard to achieve the target of 17 June 20152015
• Latin America is late. Brazil had postponed its initial objective (2016). Other countries plan 2018-2020.
• Asian countries are in different steps, some as Thailand are pushy.
Why ASO is important?
• ASO is strategic for digital dividend.
• After ASO, countries can use they frequencies for telecommunications services.
• E g of FranceE.g of FranceSome UHF frequencies (791-862 Mhz), used by analogical TV, after ASO
free for new utilization : 1st digital dividend.French government made a call of tender for these frequencies, to be used
for 4G in 2011.Results for digital dividend : 2 600 M€ for 800 Mhz, cost of switch-off in
France for the French State 150 M€, benefit : 2.450 M€.Now some countries are talking about a 2nd digital dividend on 700 Mhz
(698-780 Mhz)…
Where are you in the process ?
P2% population
Analogue TVDigital Switch-Over
Transitory frequency plan Target frequency Plan
Date 2Date 1
P1% population
Digital dividendfor mobile
Thank You !
Eve-Lise Blanc-Deleuze [email protected]
Jean-Bernard Gramunt [email protected]
12/11/2012
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BSEC - France - BRAF Seminar
Istanbul, 3 December 2012
DIGITAL TERRESTRIAL TELEVISION
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TELEVISIONLegislative framework adaptation to digital transition and
convergence, content policy and offer widening
Frédéric BokobzaFrench Ministry for Culture and Communication
Directorate General for Media and Cultural Industries
DIGITAL TERRESTRIAL TELEVISION IN FRANCE
I. Launching Digital Terrestrial Television (DTT)- Elaboration of the legislative framework- DTT roll out- The offer of TV channels and its extension- The evolution of the access to digital television- The evolution of the audiovisuel landscape- The broadcasting market
II. The Analog Switch-Off (ASO)- Legislative framework- Implementation and lessons learned from ASO- The digital dividend- The TV sets market- Technical standards- The future of DTT: further challenges
PREPARING THE LAUNCH OF DIGITAL TERRESTRIAL TELEVISION (1)
1996 - 2000 : Preliminary studies and pilots
• Studies launched by ministers (Culture and Communication, IT/Industry): Lévrier report (1996) ; public studies on planification of frequencies and on technical standards, services and TV sets (1997), …
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• Numerous experimentations were carried out in parallel by broadcasters and TV channels - from 1998 on in various regions (Bretagne, Remiremont, Neuilly, Dijon, ...)
• « White Paper » and governmental working group (1999), in the frame of which all audiovisual stakeholders were consulted, resulted in a new report (rapport Hadas-Lebel) published in January 2000
The law of 1 August 2000 has set up the framework for launching DTT:
• It extended to digital the basic principals of audiovisual frequencies management :• The Governement may request the priority allocation of frequencies for public
service broadcasting channels• The audiovisual regulatory authority (Conseil supérieur de l’audiovisuel -
CSA) selects the private channels (call for tender, selection, autorisation, convention)
PREPARING THE LAUNCH OF DIGITAL TERRESTRIAL TELEVISION (2)
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• France Télévisions is authorised to create self-owned subsidiaries, which edit free-to-air digital channels and may be funded by a fraction of the licence fee
• 3 key options were taken:• Right to simulcasting for pre-existing analog terrestrial TV channels• One digital « Bonus TV Channel » for each editor of an authorised analog
national TV channel• The CSA shall select free-to-air services in priority « insofar as they are
economically and financially sustainable »
2000 - 2004: Preparing the operational launch of DTT
• July 2001 - March 2002: call for candidatures carried out by the CSA• October 2002: selection of the TV channels by the CSA (« beauty contest »)• June 2003: autorisation of the channels by the CSA and definition of the multiplexes• July 2003: decree on the (pre)funding of spectrum refarming• December 2003: DTT launching schedule fixed by the CSA• March 2005: operational launch of DTT, initialy for 35% of the population
PREPARING THE LAUNCH OF DIGITAL TERRESTRIAL TELEVISION (3)
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DTT operational launch was postponed due to resistence by key stakesholders
• Strong reluctance of the private historic national analog channels• doubts on the compression standard to be used (MPEG-2 vs. MPEG-4)• fears regarding the spectrum refarming and its impact on the viewers• doubts on the initial population coverage rate, which was deemed too low• criticisms targeted at the offer of channels
• Pay-TV channels struggling to find commercial distributors
• Extensive discussions on the grouping of channels within the DTT multiplexes
ROLLING OUT DTT: A STEP-BY-STEP APPROACH
35% of population
Today:97.3% of population
is covered
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THE ECONOMY OF TERRESTRIAL BROADCASTING
About 100 main (high power) broadcasting stations are enough to cover 85% of the French population
Around 1,500 secondary broadcasting stations are needed in order to cover a further 10% of the population
DTT FREQUENCY SHARING WITH NEIGHBOURING COUNTRIES
International negociations under the auspices of the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) Unshared zone
Zone shared between 2 countries
Zones shared between 3 countries
Zone shared between 3 countries
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Source: CSA
The « Geneva plan 2006 » is currently used in Europe for DTT frequencies planification
Zone shared between 2 countries
ENHANCING THE OFFER OF TV CHANNELSWhile enabling analog channels to spend significantly less
« Historical » analog channels (end of the 60’s)
More recent analog channels (80’s)
About 3,5003,500 broadcasting stations per channel96% to 99%96% to 99% of population coveredAnalog broadcasting cost: 6060MM€€/year/channel/year/channel
Broadcasting stations: 230230 (Canal+), 920920 (ARTE/La 5), 1,2001,200 (M6)85% to 93%85% to 93% of population coveredDigital broadcasting cost: < 35< 35 MM€€/year/channel/year/channel6060MM€€/year/channel/year/channel < 35 < 35 MM€€/year/channel/year/channel
DTT channels(since 2005)
•• 1,6261,626 broadcasting stations mandatory for free-to-air channels. 1,1361,136 pour R3 (Canal+ multiplex). All of them shall cover more than 95% of population•• 97.3%97.3% of population covered nationally by free-to-air channels - at least 91% for almost all départementsdépartements• Digital broadcasting cost : 4040 MM€€/year/multiplex/year/multiplex, , i.e. about 6.56.5 MM€€/year/channel/year/channelfor SD channelsfor SD channels and aboutand about 13.5 M13.5 M€€/year/channel/year/channel for HD channels
FRENCH DTT MULTIPLEXES
R6R5
GR1 CNH Multi 4 MR 5 SMR 6
R1 R2 R3 R4
NTN
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Local channel
Pay TV
Free-to-air
HD
Non linear AVMS
R7R7
3 news HD channels launched Dec. 2012
R8R8
Slot for 2 SD channels
(one free-to-air, one pay-
TV)
MULTI 7MULTI 7
in region in region
of Parisof Paris
3 news HD channels launched Dec. 2012
LOCAL TV CHANNELS ON DTT (END 2010)THE EVOLUTION OF DIGITAL TV ACCESS IN FRANCE
26.8 millions of households (98.4%) receive TV
DTT has been the main driver of TV digitization
IPTV (TV over DSL) was launched in 2005.It now is the second TV accessmode in France
DTT
Percentage of households per TV access mode
60.2% 16.8 million households
62.6 %
S1 2008 S1 2009 S2 2009 S1 2010June 2007 S2 2007
16.1%
IPTV (DSL)
Satellite* (pay)
Câble*
Satellite* (free)
* digital only
14.3%
7.7%5.4%
p
15.2%
23.9%
8.2%
7.2%
7.4 million households
3,6%
S2 2008
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June 2011Dec. 2010
27.5 %
13.2 %
8.5 %9.6 %
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THE BIG FRENCH FREE-TO-AIR TV GROUPSENJOY BETTER AND BETTER RESULTS
2009 turnover of main French audiovisual groups
18 M€*84 M€*
* TV & radioNextradio
1,377 M€ 454 M€*
* TV & radio Lagardère Active
3,016 M€
* Group perimeter
330 M€2,365 M€
Cumulative results per year
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All new DTT national private channels have enjoyed better results in 2010.
Nevertheless, among these new DTT channels, only 2 (TMC et W9) had a positive result.
Source: CSA (group declarations)
Cumulative results per year for new DTT private channels
TF1
France 2
EVOLUTION OF ANNUAL AUDIENCE SHARE OF TV CHANNELS SINCE 1995
France 3
M6
Otherchannels
France 5
Canal+
ARTE
Locales, régionales, étrangères
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Source: CSA
DIGITAL TERRESTRIAL TELEVISION IN FRANCE
I. Launching Digital Terrestrial Television (DTT)- Elaboration of the legislative framework- DTT roll out- The offer of TV channels and its extension- The evolution of the access to digital television- The evolution of the audiovisuel landscape- The broadcasting market
II. The Analog Switch-Off (ASO)- Legislative framework- Implementation and lessons learned from ASO- The digital dividend- The TV sets market- Technical standards- The future of DTT: further challenges
The law of 5 March 2007 « Television of the Future »
• Main principles and conditions of the analog switch-off• Extension of DTT coverage to a minimum of 95% of the population
• Mandatory of analog channels• Incentives for new DTT channels (renewal of licenses)
• Set up of a subscription-free satellite bundle with all DTT free-to-air channels • Date of analog switch-off (ASO): 30 November 2011• Progressive ASO, region by region (schedule to be decided by the CSA, 9
months in advance)
THE LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK OF THE ANALOG SWITCH-OFF (1)
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• Set up of a « Groupement d’intérêt public » (GIP) to carry out operations• A « bonus channel » granted to each private channel after its ASO
• Protection and help for viewers• Mandatory information of renters by tenants• Mandatory (progressive) integration of DTT tuners into TV sets• Help scheme for low-income viewers
• Reallocation of frequencies made available: the digital dividend
• Preparation for HDTV and mobile TV launch
The law of 4 August 2008 « Modernisation of the Economy »
• CSA shall publish the list of DTT broadcasting stations and their switch-on dates
The law of 5 March 2009 « New Public Service Broadcasting »
• Set up of a second subscription-free satellite bundle with free-to-air channels• Local executives (cities, départements, regions) may submit requests for frequencies to the CSA for setting up their own broadcasting stations
THE LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK OF THE ANALOG SWITCH-OFF (2)
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The law of 17 December 2009 « Against Digital Exclusion »
• Grants more power to CSA for imposing brodcasting power levels to multiplexes• Creates local commissions for the follow-up of ASO in each département• Provides funding for local executives setting up their own broadcasting stations• Strengthens help scheme for people living in zones not covered by DTT (no revenue condition)• Free support (at home) for elderly and/or impaired people• Provisions for DTT launch overseas
Members of « France Télé Numérique »- The State (50%)- The national analog channels: France Télévisions (15%), TF1 (10%),
Canal+ (10%), M6 (10%) et ARTE (5%)
Tasks of « France Télé Numérique »
FRANCE TÉLÉ NUMÉRIQUEGroupement d’intérêt public created by the law
« Television of the Future » of 5 March 2007
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Tasks of « France Télé Numérique »- To inform and help French residents through the ASO (national and regional
communication campaign, local information, …)- To coordinate operations with all local stakeholders (technicians, officials,
associations, real estate owners and renters, …)- To manage the help scheme and technical assistance for elderly/impaired
people
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ORGANIZATION OF THE ASO PROCESS
Parliament / Government- Design national plan for ASO- Design & fund 100% for help scheme & communication campaigns- Fund 50% of other « France Télé Numérique »’s expenses
Conseil supérieur de l'audiovisuel (CSA)- Negotiate target frequencies with neighboring countries- Define the national frequency plan
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- Decide regions analogue switch-off dates- Work out DTT coverage maps
Groupement d'intérêt public « France télé numérique »- Carry out information & communication (national, regional)
campaigns- Manage help and assistance schemes- Drive analogue switch-off in each region with local stakeholders
2010
2011
Nord-Cotentin 18/11/09Alsace 02/02/10Basse-Normandie 09/03/10Pays-de-la-Loire 18/05/10Bretagne 08/06/10Champagne-Ardenne 28/09/10Lorraine 29/09/10Poitou-Charentes 19/10/10Centre 19/10/10Bourgogne 16/11/10Franche-Comté 16/11/10H N di 01/02/11
ASO REGIONAL SCHEDULE
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2011
Haute-Normandie 01/02/11Nord-Pas-de-Calais 01/02/11Picardie 02/02/11Île-de-France 08/03/11Aquitaine 29/03/11Limousin 29/03/11Auvergne 10/05/11Corse 24/05/11Côte-d’Azur 24/05/11Rhône-Alpes 14/06/11Provence-Alpes 05/07/11Alpes 20/09/11Midi-Pyrénées 08/11/11Languedoc-Roussillon 29/11/11
1,450 broadcasting stations set up in 2 years
THE NATIONAL HELP SCHEMEEntirely funded by Government
For low income households– Depends on the income level– Help to payback the purchase of DTT Set Top Box (25€ maximum)– Help to upgrade or renew the antenna (120€ maximum)
For elderly (more than 70 years old) and/or disabled peopleF i i l di it ( t h )
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– Free service including on-site (at home): – Plugging the Set Top Box to the TV– Channels scanning
For households out of DTT coverage– For all residents of designated areas, with no consideration for income level– Help to pay back the rent or the purchase of any technical solutions (mainly
satellite STB) to receive the DTT services (250€ maximum)
Total cost: 156.6M156.6M€€• Total borne by the State: 101.5M101.5M€€, including 38.5M€ for help schemes,
technical assistance and funding of local executives • Total borne by public channels: 27.5M27.5M€€• Total borne by private analog channels: 27.6M27.6M€€, i.e. 9.2M€ each
Communication:
• 7 national advertising campaigns on TV
• 2,650,000 phone calls received by call center; more than 8 million visits on
THE ASO IN FIGURES (2009-2011)
22
the website www.tousaunumerique.fr
• 30 million leaflets distributed; one million people met in 3,250 cities/villages; 25,000 fixed information points in townhalls
Free on-site assistance:
• 500,000 on site (at home) interventions for elderly and/or impared people
• 43,000 people (students and others) provided help for free
Funding for local executives: more than 350 broadcasting stations et 23 local cabled network switched to digital. The State paid about 33% of the cost
ALLOCATION OF THE DIGITAL DIVIDEND
• Parliamentary ad hoc Commission worked on the allocation of the digital dividend
- According to the law, more than half of the digital dividend was allocated to Media Broadcasting Services :
– Target : • 11 multiplexes for DTT services + 2 multiplexes for Mobile TV• Conversion of all services to High Definition
23
– Band III (VHF) dedicated to Digital radio services
- European Decision to free and harmonize the use of the 790-862 MHz band
- This band was allocated to mobile services
- Workshops and tests in progress to make 4G communication and broadcast services work together around 790 MHz
THE DIGITAL DIVIDEND
Frequencies:Channels 60-69
Bloc A2 x 10 MHz
Bloc D2 x 10 MHz
Blocs B & C4 x 5 MHz
Result of the bidding
683M€ 891M€ 1,065M€
Annualfee
1% du yearly turnover generated by mobile services (i.e. a total of 200 to 300M€ pour the
3 operators)
Total:2,640M€
12/11/2012
5
0 4 77
05 3
605 8
50 6 000
7 500
8 500 8 7
00
5 000
6 000
7 000
8 000
9 000
Colour takes over
ASO + HD + flat screen
Flat screen + DTT
THE TV SET MARKET IN FRANCE FROM 1974 TO 2011
Annual sales (thousands TV sets)
1 660 1 9
00 2 150
2 215
2 300
2 225 2 4
60 2 85
02 9
502 5
75 2 700
2 650
3 125
3 550
4 275
3 450
3 525
3 950
3 750 3 9
503 7
503 5
75 3 95
03 5
754 0
004 0
004 0
503 7
50 3 845
3 845
4 360 4
0
1 000
2 000
3 000
4 000
5 000
1974
1976
1978
1980
1982
1984
1986
1988
1990
1992
1994
1996
1998
2000
2002
2004
2006
2008
2010
over black&white
Source: SIMAVELEC, February 2012
4 770
5 3605 850 6 000
7 500
8 500 8 700
6 000
7 000
8 000
9 000
10 000
DTT
Flat screen
ASO
THE TV SET MARKET IN FRANCE FROM 2005 ET 2011
Annual sales (thousands TV sets)
4 770
0
1 000
2 000
3 000
4 000
5 000
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Flat screen
High Definition
Price decrease
Source: SIMAVELEC, February 2012
THE STAKES OF A MODERNISATION OF THE TECHNICAL STANDARDS FOR DTT
New technical standards enable: - optimisation of spectrum use- wider TV channel offer- decrease in broadcasting costs - to make spectrum available for telecom services- revenue generation for public finances
Broadcasting standards: DVB-T, DVB-T2 => digital capacity of a multiplex
HEVC
27
Source: CSA
Encoding standards: MPEG-2, MPEG-4, HEVC... => digital throughput for a TV channel
DVB-T multiplex (French parameters) : 24 Mb/s• 4 Mb/s for a SD MPEG-2 (free-to-air) channel• 2.5 Mb/s for a SD MPEG-4 (pay-TV) channel• 8 Mb/s for a HD MPEG-4 channel=> Number of channels broadcast in a DVB-T multiplex
• 6 SD MPEG-2 free-to-air channels• 10 SD MPEG-4 pay-TV channels• 3 HD MPEG-4 channels
MPEG-2
MPEG-4
DVB-T : 24 Mb/s DVB-T2 : 36 à 40 Mb/s
THE FUTURE OF DTT & DIGITAL TVTechnical and socio-cultural policy challenges
Extension of the coverage of the R5 multiplex (HD channels)
Launch of R7/R8 multiplexes (new HD channels), new local channels
• New types of services: interactive TV (HbbTV standard), connected TV non-linear audiovisual media services (VoD)
28
TV, non linear audiovisual media services (VoD)
• Enhanced image quality (generalised migration to HD; Ultra-HD & 3D TV to be studied)
• Modernisation of broadcasting and compression standards (DVB-T2, MPEG-4, HEVC, …)
• Towards a second « digital dividend »?
THANK YOU FOR YOUR
ATTENTION!Frédéric Bokobza
Directorate General for Media and Cultural Industries
Ministry of Culture and Communication
+33 1 40 15 33 95
12/11/2012
1
Impacts of Convergence on Audio-Visual MediaServices
03 December 2012NEW AUDIO VISUAL BROADCASTING TECHNOLOGIES
AND THE NEW ECONOMIC MODELS ARISING FROM THEMISTANBUL
Taha YUCELVice-President
Radio and Television Supreme Council
Various Transmission Medias and Convergence of Sectors
Cable
Satellite
Before Diversification After Diversification
Cable
SatelliteIPTV
WEB TV
Mobil TV
Terrestrial
TerrestrialOTT TV
ConvergenceCable and Satellite Platforms – telephony, internetTelecommunication operators – IPTV, Web TV, Mobil TV
World Internet Use
Kaynak: ITU, 2010Source: ITU, ICTA 2010
Internet Users Increase in Turkey and EU
Source: InternetWorldStats, ICTA 2010
World Internet Traffic (2010 – 2015)
Source: Informa Telecoms & Media
World Internet Traffic vs. Services (2010 – 2015)
Source: Informa Telecoms & Media
12/11/2012
2
Broadcasting Sector in Turkey
TV Households18 million
Broadcasting Companies Registered to RTÜKSatellite, Cable, Terrestrial total: 1311
Cable Platforms (31.12.2011)2 platforms with total 1,243,985 analog ‐ 497,030 digital subscribers
Satellite Platforms (31.12.2011)2 platforms with total 3.1 million subscribers
Source: RTUK
Analogue TerrestrialTelevision Licence Application Type Broadcasting Company Number
National Television (T1) 25
Regional Television (T2) 15
Local Television (T3) 207
Total 247
Turkish Radio and Television Broadcasting Sector
FM Radio Licence Application Type Broadcasting Company Number
National Radio (R1) 38
Regional Radio (R2) 98
Local Radio (R3) 922
Total 1.058
Source: RTUK
020406080
100120140160180200
2001
-20
05
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011Co
mpa
ny N
umbe
r
Years
Satellite TelevisionSatellite Radio
Turkish Radio and Television Broadcasting Sector
Source: RTUK
0102030405060708090
100
Com
pany
Num
ber
Years
Cable Radio
Cable Television
Turkey – The Facts
Source: Mediascope
Convergence is Taking Place in Turkey
88 % online on mobile everyday compared to 60% on PC4.4 m heavy internet users24% of all Turkish internet userso 37% among 16‐24so 28% among 25‐34so 28% among 25 34so 19% among 35‐44s85% online 5+ days a week37% own a laptop57% of all broadband users access wirelessly20% access the internet on their computer whilstwatching TV
Source: Mediascope
Global TV Sector Revenue Change (Billion EUROs)
Source: IDATE
12/11/2012
3
Global TV Sector Revenue Types Change, 2006-2013 (Billion EUROs)
Source: IDATE
Europe’s 5 Big Market Total TV/Video Sector Revenue Change , 2008-2020
Source: IDATE
Pay TV Subscribers (2010)
Source: Informa Telecoms & Media
Global On-Demand TV Revenue Projection, 2011-2016 (Billion US$)
Source: Informa Telecoms & Media
Global Advertisement Revenue Change, 2006-2013 (Billion EUROs)
Source: IDATE - Zenith Optimedia
Total Ad Revenue of Turkish Broadcasting Sector, 2000-2011 (million TL)
Source: RTUK
12/11/2012
4
Hybrid TV Projection vs. Countries (TVHome %)
Source: IDATE
Europe’s 5 Big Market HDTV Channel Numbers (2008-2013)
Source: IDATE
TV Transmission Medias vs. Regions 2016 Projection
Source: Informa Telecoms & Media
Digital Broadcasting Projection vs. Regions (2011-2016)
Source: Informa Telecoms & Media
Internet Video vs. Traditional Broadcasting
Source:TDG
3 Dimension Television Technology – 3D TV
• 3D TVs again discovered.– Anaglyphic 3D (passive red‐blue glasses)– Polarization 3D (passive polarized glasses)– Alternate‐frame sequencing (active glasses)– Autostereoscopic 3D (without glasses)
• 3D Movies (3D Blu‐ray) and games’ impact.
12/11/2012
5
Audiences vs. Media and Content
• Content is always King:– Quality content takes place in every platform.– Audiences would like to reach every content at any time.
• Investors question future of classic FTA TV business model:– RTL stated to his investors that every channel costs will be %15
decreased.
Digital TVs PVRs widening of internet platform increases pressure on
Investors’ Outlook on Media Sector
– Digital TVs, PVRs, widening of internet platform increases pressure on traditional broadcasters.
• Internet is an important media however it has a problem of converting money.– High quality videos, games, news and sports news interest.– People perceive internet as a free media – financing with
advertisements.
Source: UBS
Defined and Regulated Sector Players
Media Content Providers
InfrastructureTransmitter & Tower
TV STATIONS RADIO STATIONS VoD
Multiplex Operators
Platform Operators
InfrastructureOperators
Satellite
Cable
IPTV
Transmitter & Tower Contract Operator
National Broadcast
Regional Broadcast
Local Broadcast
Head Ends
TelePort
Head Ends
SW
SPVSpecial Purpose
Vehicle
Frequency Sorting TenderBroadcasters
SPE
Mux. Operator
RATEM
Individual Participations
Content
Contract
AuditPerformance
RTUKBTK
Coordination Licence
Industry Association
Network Provider
Roles & Responsibilities
Mux. Operator
Tower Operator
Consumers
Mux. Operator
Streaming, datacenter
Tower Operator
Civil engineeringTransponders
TV and radio channels
SLABouquet
Results Tarriffs
Coverage Plan Criteria
Single Operating Entity(Financing)
StandardizationSet top box
Network Provider
Thank you
11/12/2012
1
BSEC – FRANCE ‐ BRAF SEMINAR Cluster Images & Networks / ImaginLab
Istanbul, December 3, 2012David Mouen (Thomson Video Networks)Michel Corriou (Images & Réseaux)
Images & Réseaux ©20122012/12/03
Cluster Images & Networks / ImaginLaband
positioning of its members in the DTT value chain
Images & Réseaux ©20122012/12/03
Images & Réseaux Cluster – Intro Clip
2012/12/03 Images & Réseaux ©2012 3
Images & Réseaux organization : 232 members
Associations
Economic development
entities
Images & Réseaux ©2012 42012/12/03
Facts & figures (end 2011)
480 certified projects610 M€ R&D investment
232 members
235
210 funded projects
30 000 job positions
1 Living Lab platform
235 M€ public funding
800 researchers & engineers80 running projects
2 Cantines
Images & Réseaux ©2012 52012/12/03
Images & Réseaux DTV ecosystem
Images & Réseaux ©2012 62012/12/03
11/12/2012
2
ImaginLab, a Testbed and a Living Lab
Technology push
ISP
Phone operatorPhone operatorBroadcaster
DTV Broadcaster
User Driven Innovation
Images & Réseaux ©2012 72012/12/03
ImaginLab
Images & Réseaux ©2012 82012/12/03
Foreword
ImaginLab is the only entity in France to be:Fiber‐To‐The‐Home Operator
Full Mobile (4G LTE) Operator with its own RAN (frequency granted by Arcep)
Internet Service Provider (registered at Arcep)
Telephony Service (IMS based) Provider with its own PLMN id (registered at Arcep)Arcep)
Digital Terrestrial TV Broadcaster (channel allocated by CSA)
ImaginLab is a Living LabMember of ENoLL
Member of France Living Lab
ImaginLab and Images & Reseaux clusterImaginLab, a target in the strategic roadmap
Identified as a key success during cluster national audit in 2012
Images & Réseaux ©2012 92012/12/03
What technical assets for ImaginLab?
ImaginLab, a Digital Television Broadcast Network in Rennes, France
Images & Réseaux ©2012 102012/12/03
ImaginLab, DVB‐T2 Assets in Rennes
A DVB‐T2 implementationTestbed offer
In partnership with TDF for broadcast
TMS
External accessImaginLab
PC « Player »+ carte DektecDTA‐2160 Modulator DVB‐T2
TeamCastGateway DVB‐T2
TVN
Switch MGMT
PC « Sonde T2 »+ Referee Enensys
TDF TowerRue du clos‐
courtel
MPEG-2 TS
Supervision
EmitterRohde & Schwarz
To secondary site (signal)
To secondary site(supervision) T2-MI
GPS receiver
Switch PROD
11
site (signal)
TMS
Modulator DVB‐T2TeamCast
Switch MGNT
PC « Sonde T2 »+ Referee Enensys
France 3 TowerAvenue Janvier
EmitterRohde & Schwarz
From Main site (signal)
To main site(supervision)
GPS receiver
Switch PROD
Supervision
T2-MI
2012/12/03 Images & Réseaux ©2012
Merci ! Thanks for your attention !
Mi h l C i
mcorriou@images‐et‐reseaux.com+33‐6‐72‐00‐05‐85
http://www.linkedin.com/pub/michel‐[email protected]
Michel Corriou
Images & Réseaux ©2012 122012/12/03
12/11/2012
1
BSEC – FRANCE - BRAF SEMINAR “Technical Aspect”
Cluster Images & Networks / ImaginLab andCluster Images & Networks / ImaginLab and positioning of its members in the DTT value chain
Istanbul – December 3, 2012
DAVID MOUEN – MARKETING DIRECTOR FOR DTTV & CONTRIBUTION
12/11/2012
THOMSON VIDEO NETWORKS THROUGHOUT THE MEDIA CHAIN
12/11/2012
HEADENDSOLUTIONS
ForDTTVDTH
CableIPTV
WEB TVContribution
THOMSON VIDEO NETWORKS AT A GLANCE20 years of innovation and continuous service to deliver leading-edge compression and network systems to network operators and broadcasters worldwideWorldwide leader in head-end systems (DTTV, Satellite, Cable, WebTV, HD, SD, mobile formats)Significant global presence to ensure close customer proximity
~400 employees with R&D center (200 employees), manufacturing location and multiple sales and services offices
Trusted supplier to hundreds of customers around the worldOver 30,000 active HD, SD and Mobile TV channels deployed worldwide
DTTV Key Customers
12/11/2012
Culture of sustained innovation and technology
Southwick, MASales
Field Services
Conflans (Paris), FranceSales & Bids
Rennes, France, HQR&D - MarketingSales - Factory
SingaporeSales
Field services
Brest, FranceOperations
Miami, FL Sales
Field services
Sao PauloSales
Field services
BeijingSales
Field services
AfricaNetwork of resellers,
integrators and partners, on site L1 support
DTTV Key Customers
DVB-T/T2 ADOPTION / DEPLOYMENT STATUSSource: DVB
ATSC 8ISDB-T 11DMB-T 3Undecided 46
4
DVB-T/T2 T T2Adopted 45 34Deployed 71 16
TOTAL 116 50
DIGITAL TV - DTTV VALUE CHAINBroadcasting or Secondary
DistributionMultiplexes generation and transport.
Satellite and telecom transport.
Distribution (or Backhaul)24/7/365 to the headends
Satellite and telecom transport.
ContributionRequirement = Highest quality exchanges.
Satellite and telecom transport.
5
Head-endMultiplex Generation
Mux Operators / Service Packagers
Productionstudios
Live events
TV Playout
Post-Production
Broadcaster
TelecomNetwork
Telecom / Sat Oprators
TelecomNetwork
TelecomNetwork
DIGITAL TV: NEW SERVICES AND BENEFITS
Multiple Services over Multiple Services over each frequencyeach frequency
Multiple Services over Multiple Services over each frequencyeach frequency
•Mix of TV, radio, data•21 SD or 7 HD (DVB-T2 36 Mbps, MPEG-4)•Sharing Tx costs
•Mix of TV, radio, data•21 SD or 7 HD (DVB-T2 36 Mbps, MPEG-4)•Sharing Tx costs
Multiple Services over Multiple Services over each frequencyeach frequency
•Mix of TV, radio, data•21 SD or 7 HD (DVB-T2 36 Mbps, MPEG-4)•Sharing Tx costs
ContentContentRegionalizationRegionalization
ContentContentRegionalizationRegionalization
•Local channels•National / regional switch Advertising replacement•Multi languages / video•Thematic channels
•Local channels•National / regional switch Advertising replacement•Multi languages / video•Thematic channels
ContentContentRegionalizationRegionalization
•Local channels•National / regional switch Advertising replacement•Multi languages / video•Thematic channels
Better Picture / Audio Better Picture / Audio QualityQuality
Better Picture / Audio Better Picture / Audio QualityQuality
•Digital video quality•High quality audio (digital codecs, 2.0, 5.1)•Improved reception•Increase coverage
•Digital video quality•High quality audio (digital codecs, 2.0, 5.1)•Improved reception•Increase coverage
Better Picture / Audio Better Picture / Audio QualityQuality
•Digital video quality•High quality audio (digital codecs, 2.0, 5.1)•Improved reception•Increase coverage
Saving Saving FrequenciesFrequenciesSaving Saving FrequenciesFrequencies
•SFN + MPEG-4 + T2•Opportunity for other usage (mobile, telecommunications, radio, …)•Digital Dividende
•SFN + MPEG-4 + T2•Opportunity for other usage (mobile, telecommunications, radio, …)•Digital Dividende
Saving Saving FrequenciesFrequencies
•SFN + MPEG-4 + T2•Opportunity for other usage (mobile, telecommunications, radio, …)•Digital Dividende
6
High High Definition, Definition, surround audiosurround audioHigh High Definition, Definition, surround audiosurround audioHigh High Definition, Definition, surround audiosurround audio Interactive ServicesInteractive ServicesInteractive ServicesInteractive Services
•Electronic Program Guide•Teletext, Subtitles•New interactivity HbbTV HbbTV
•Electronic Program Guide•Teletext, Subtitles•New interactivity HbbTV HbbTV
Interactive ServicesInteractive Services•Electronic Program Guide•Teletext, Subtitles•New interactivity HbbTV HbbTV
Offering Pay TVOffering Pay TVOffering Pay TVOffering Pay TV
•Live Pay per view,, push VOD•Live Pay per view,, push VOD
Offering Pay TVOffering Pay TV
•Live Pay per view,, push VOD
12/11/2012
2
SWEDEN DVB-T NETWORK - TV SERVICE FACTS
LAUNCHED APRIL 1999ASO 2005-20067 MUXES (5 DVB-T AND 2 DVB-T2)~160 TX SITES – BOTH MFN AND SFN REGIONS50 TV SERVICES (8 HD) – 1/5 FTA AND 4/5 PAYTVMIX OF MPEG2 SD, MPEG4 SD AND MPEG4 HDSTRONG PAYTV OFFERHUGE LEVEL OF REGIONALIZATION
According to the multiplex up to 32 regions.For 7 multiplexes over 120 multiplexes delivered on the network.
PROVIDERSOne network provider:On Pay TV operator: Boxer
HEADEND: 100% ; CAS: VIACCESS7
SWEDEN DVB-T NETWORK: SERVICES AND MULTIPLEX
120 multiplexes 120 multiplexes delivered by the
8
headend
CASE STUDY: DTTV IN AZERBAIJAN 2004: FIRST DTT TRIAL IN BAKU - 4 SD MPEG-2 SERVICES.2009: DTT TRIAL IN BAKU & GANJA, 10 SD MPEG-4 SERVICES«B&B TV KOMMUNIKEYŞN» COMPANY
30% gvt owned, 70% private. Leading cable TV operator. 04/2011, obtained a license for digital broadcasting.
NEW DVB-T SFN NETWORK IN NAKHICHEVANT t f d 2011 d l t i 2012Tests from end 2011, deployment in 2012.1 public FTA mux and 5 commercial Muxes72 TV channels as a total (71 SD + 1 HD) with CAS
1 PUBLIC MUX12 SD MPEG-4 broadcasted in Naxcovan City and distributed in 4 other main stations over IP (85% coverage).
5 COMMERCIAL MUXES56 SD MPEG-4 + 1 HD MPEG-4
DVB-T INFRASTRUCTURE, READY TO SWITCH TO T29
DIGITAL TERRESTRIAL TV SYSTEM OVERVIEW
Primary DistributionBackhaul
Multiplex Delivery
1010
National Head-endMultiplex GenerationGlobal Management Regional Head-end
Multiplex CustomizationRegional Head-endMultiplex Customization
TelecomTelecomTelecomTelecom
TransmittersMultiplex
Broadcasting
TransmittersMultiplex
Broadcasting
Regional Head-endMultiplex Customization
TelecomTelecom
TransmittersMultiplex
BroadcastingRegional Head-endMultiplex CustomizationRegional Head-endMultiplex Customization
TelecomTelecomNetworkNetworkTelecomTelecomNetworkNetwork
TransmittersMultiplex
Broadcasting
TransmittersMultiplex
Broadcasting
Regional Head-endMultiplex Customization
TelecomTelecomNetworkNetwork
TransmittersMultiplex
BroadcastingBroadcastersPlayout Centers
Live to live National / Regional
switch
Advertising substitution (Ad Insert)
24/7 local channel insertion
TelecomTelecomNetworkNetwork
WHICH COMPRESSION / MODULATION STANDARDS TO SELECT?
1111
Compression:
MPEG‐2?MPEG‐4?HEVC?
Modulation:
DVB‐T?DVB‐T2?
Mbit/s
8
12
14
16
MPEG-2 HDTV encoders
MPEG CODEC EVOLUTION, FROM MPEG-2 to HEVC
HEVC standard HEVC standard readyready beginingbegining 2013201311stst generation generation HEVC encoders (SW)HEVC encoders (SW)
SW decoders (mobile devices)SW decoders (mobile devices)11stst generation HD AVC generation HD AVC
dd
MPEG‐2H.264/MPEG‐4 AVC
12% annual bit‐rate reduction
HEVC
4
6
2
2012
Applications: Web TV / OTT, HBBTVApplications: Web TV / OTT, HBBTV
22ndnd generation generation HEVC encoders (HW)HEVC encoders (HW)HW decoders in STB and TVHW decoders in STB and TV
Applications: DTTV, DTH, CableApplications: DTTV, DTH, Cable
20152013HEVC
encodersencoders(DSP/FPGA)(DSP/FPGA)
22ndnd Generation HD AVC encoderGeneration HD AVC encoder33rdrd Generation HD AVC encoderGeneration HD AVC encoder
2003MPEG-4 AVC
(H.264)
1995MPEG-2
Page 12
12/11/2012
3
DVB-T2 VERSUS DVB-T - ENHANCEMENTS
DVB-T DVB-T2 Comment
FEC CC + RS LDPC + BCHA much more robust FEC, the same as DVB-S2, for protection against high noise levels and interference.
Code rate 1/2, 2/3, 3/4, 5/6, 7/8 1/2, 3/5, 2/3, 3/4, 4/5 More code rate for enhanced flexible configuration of transmission parameters.
Constellation QPSK, 16QAM, 64QAM QPSK, 16QAM, 64QAM, 256QAM
256 QAM modulation to increase the nb of bit per symbol, capacity by 33% versus 64 QAM, exploiting improved FEC performance.Rotated constellation enhance robustness to frequency selective fading.
Guard Interval 1/4, 1/8, 1/16, 1/321/4, 19/256, 1/8, 19/128,
1/16, 1/32, 1/128More guard interval offering more flexibility for transmission engineering.
1996 2008
DVB-T2 VERSUS DVB-T: MUCH BETTER TRAIDOFF BETWEEN TRANSMISSIONCAPACITY, TRANSMISSION ROBUSTNESS AND TRANSMITTER POWER.
13
, , g g
FFT size 2K, 8K1K, 2K, 4K, 8K, 16K, 16K
ext., 32K, 32K ext.
Increase the symbol period range for more flexibility.More carriers(16K, 32K) = more capacity.Less carriers (1K) = more robustness.
Scattered pilots 8% of total 1%, 2%, 4%, 8% of total Additional flexibility to maximize the data payload.
Continual pilots 2,6% of total 0,35% of total
RF Bandwidth 5, 6, 7, 8 Mhz 1.7, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10 MHz More flexibility to split the spectrum.
Max. TS Bandwidth 31,66 Mb/s 50,34 Mb/s Up to 60% more MPEG TS capacity compared to DVB-T
Typical TS Bandwidth 24.1 Mb/s 36 Mb/s
DVB-T2 VERSUS DVB-T: TRADEOFF EXAMPLES
T2 BETTER CAPACITYSame Tx powerSame coverage+50% capacity
T2 BETTER COVERAGESame Tx powerBetter coverageSame capacity
T2 LOWER THE TXPOWER
5db to 7db weaker signal ¼ powerSame coverage~Same capacity
CapaciCapacityty
GeogrGeographicaaphica
llCoverCoverageage
TransTransmittermitter
PowerPower
DVB‐T DVB‐T2M d l ti 64QAM 256QAM
14
DVB‐T DVB‐T2Modulation 16QAM 16QAMFFT Size 8k 16kGuard Interval 1/4 1/8Bandwidth Standard ExtendedCapacity 13Mbit/s 15 Mbit/s
Modulation 64QAM 256QAMFFT Size 2k 32kGuard Interval 1/32 1/128
FEC2/3 CC + RS(8%)
3/5 LDPC + BCH
Scattered Pilots 8% 1%Continual Pilots 2.6% 0.5%P1/P2 Overheads 0.0% 0.5%Bandwidth Standard ExtendedCapacity 24Mbit/s 36.1 Mbit/s
DVB-T2: MULTIPLE PLP FOR DIFFERENTIATED QOS BROADCASTING
T2-MI Over
IPor
ASI
DVB-T2 Channel
PLP 1PLP 1256 256 QAMQAM
PLP 3PLP 3QPSKQPSK
PLP 216QAM
OUT1
OUT3
OUT2
DVB‐T2 Modulator
GPSPLP1 (26 Mbps)
2 HD + 7 SD
8 MHz chanel, 36 Mbps TS
RoofRoof
IndoorIndoor
8 MHz chanel, 36 Mbps TS
15
PLP2 (6.5 Mbps)1 HD + 3 SD
PLP3 (3.5 Mbps)4 SD + 7 radios
IndoorIndoor
M-PLP ALLOWS TO ADDRESS MULTIPLE APPLICATIONSFrom the same transmitters and RF channelFully independent modulation & FEC parameters for each PLP
HOW MANY TV SERVICES IN A DTTV MULTIPLEX?
ASSUMPTIONS: HIGH QUALITY PICTURES, 2012 STATE OF THE ART MPEG-2/4 ENCODER, STATISTICAL MULTIPLEXING, DVB-T: 24 MBPS, DVB-T2: 36 MBPS
16
DTTV ROLL-OUT SCENARIOS
NO DTT YET ?Choose T2 + MPEG-4.
DEPLOYING DVB-T / MPEG-2? Need an infrastructure capable to migrate to DVB-T2 + MPEG-4.
A DVB T? A T2 !ALREADY HAVE DVB-T? ADD T2 !
Typically for HD services.
STRESS ON SPECTRUMAVAILABILITY?
Build long term plan to migrate to DVB-T2 + HEVC (available from 2016).
17
DIGITAL TERRESTRIAL TV COMPONENT DETAILS
EncodersSD/HD
MPEG62/4
IRD
C&D decoder Multiplexer
DVB-S/S2Modulation
FromPlayout Centers
DVB-T/T2Monitoring
TelecomBackbone
Demod/Descrambler
AcquisitionAcquisition CompressionCompression
QOS QOS MonitoringMonitoring
SatelliteSatelliteTransportTransport
18
EPG serverserver
Service MultiplexingScrambling
Data InsertionSplice / TransrateSFN adaptationDVB-T2 gateway
Smart Switch
Conditional Accessservers
MPEG Video Servers
AdministrationMonitoring
Redundancy
Backbone
IP/SDH/PDH/ATMNetwork Adaptor
IP, PDH, SDHµW, FiberManagementManagement
MPEGMPEGServerServer
TelecomTelecomTransportTransport
CASCAS
HbbTV carouselData ServerData Server
Live or FTP
MultiplexingMultiplexingT2 & SFN T2 & SFN AdaptationAdaptation
DVBDVB--T/T2T/T2ModulationModulation
12/11/2012
4
DIGITAL TERRESTRIAL TV COMPONENT DETAILS
EncodersSD/HD
MPEG62/4
IRD
C&D decoder Multiplexer
DVB-S/S2Modulation
FromPlayout Centers
DVB-T/T2Monitoring
TelecomBackbone
Demod/Descrambler
19
EPG serverserver
Service MultiplexingScrambling
Data InsertionSplice / TransrateSFN adaptationDVB-T2 gateway
Smart Switch
Conditional Accessservers
MPEG Video Servers
AdministrationMonitoring
Redundancy
Backbone
IP/SDH/PDH/ATMNetwork Adaptor
IP, PDH, SDHµW, Fiber
HbbTV carousel
Live or FTP
DIGITAL TERRESTRIAL TV - I&R PLAYERS (NON EXHAUSTIVE LIST)Modulation
& TransmitterSatellite & Telecom
Networks & CDNHeadendDSNG, C&DTerminals
20
Broadcasting Services
Interactive Applications
THANK YOU
12/11/2012
RussiaRussia
UkraineUkraineMoldaviaMoldavia
RomaniaRomania
BulgariaBulgaria
SerbiaSerbia
22
TurkeyTurkey
GeorgiaGeorgiaBulgariaBulgaria
GreeceGreece
MacedoniaMacedonia
AlbaniaAlbania AzerbaijanAzerbaijanArmeniaArmenia
DVBDVB--T2T2
DVBDVB--TT
DVB-T2 ARCHITECTURE
TS overASI or IP
Audio & VideoI/F
T2-MI over TS overASI or IP
TS overASI or IP
T2-MI over TS overASI or IP
GPS
GPS
RF DVB-T2
Goal of the DVB‐T2 Gateway•Encapsulation of TS in BB Frame then in T2‐MI packets.•Provides in‐band configuration to the modulators (channel parameters).•Insert timestamp for SFN operation. Thus Transmitters have a deterministic cway of building the final signal to transmit in an SFN environment
SFN cells
23
Mux
DVB‐T2 Gateway
Encoding Multiplexing DVB-T2AdaptationDVB-T2 Modulation &
Broadcasting
GPS
HeadendHeadend
DVB‐T2 Modulator
DVB‐T2 Modulator
GPS
BBTV : WHY AND STATUS
THE CONNECTED TV: AN OPPORTUNITY FOR BROADCASTERSKeep the viewer in the broadcaster broadband walled gardenOffering new services with more viewers engagement like voting, questions, etc
HBBTV ADOPTION AND DEPLOYMENTAdopted by many European countries as Germany,France, Spain, the Nordics, IrelandHbbTV 1.1.1 is running in France Germany, PolandTrials: Poland, Netherlands, Russia, Czech Republic, Switzerland …. Interest in the US, Argentina, Australia, Japan, China and Malaysia
HBBTV V1.5 (08/12)MPEG-DASH for linear services, DRM protection for payTVSupported by TV sets and STBs by Q4 2012
X10 MORE CONNECTED TV’S IN 2016 VS 201124
12/11/2012
5
HBBTV EXAMPLE
Audio Video + HbbTV App
Content
producer VoD Streaming
Interactivity
25
1
s Te
chno
logi
ess
Tech
nolo
gies
epar
tmen
t ep
artm
ent
Operational implementation of the Digital switch-over
Future expected transitions
CSA
C
SA ––
Dire
ctio
n de
sD
irect
ion
des
TV
TV p
lann
ing
depl
anni
ng d
e
Insights from the audioviual regulating authority
Istanbul - Turkey
3 décembre 2012
Jean-Louis [email protected]
The legal framework
•The Broadcasting Act defines the regulatory framework
•It gives CSA (conseil supérieur de l’audiovisuel, Broadcasting authority) a major responsability in : •Spectrum allocation for DTT services (UHF band)•Selection of private channels by a call for tenders : « beauty contest » •Allocation of frequencies for public tv broadcasting, without a call for tenders, and private channels after the selection
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 2
p
•The actual role of the French regulator in the ASO, derived from the allocation of frequencies, covered two fields, on two periods of time :
•The frequency planning (in order to avoid interference with well selected frecencies for each site) in the preparation period•The coordination of the stakeholders (6 multiplexes, 4 technical broadcasters), especially on the implementation level, (deployment period)
•The regulator tries also to anticipate the next steps to ensure the sound development of DTT
outline
►1. the ASO experience : frequency planning (preparation) ;
►2. the ASO experience : an operationnal challenge (deployment) ;
►3. After the ASO : what are the next steps ? (new standards, next transition)
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 3
►ASO = digital switch-over
outline
►1. the ASO experience : frequency planning (preparation) ;
►2. the ASO experience : an operationnal challenge (deployment) ;
►3. After the ASO : what are the next steps ? (new standards, next transition)
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 4
►ASO = analogue switch-over
1. The ASO experience : frequency planning
► The ASO experience : a preparation challenge (frequency planning)
o How many TV programmes, how many multiplexes ?
D fi i th t k
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 5
o Defining the network
o A progressive time schedule for the ASO process
o Defining the frequency plan
o Two models (long/short simulcast period)
DTT in France
► 2 standards :► For the video coding (MPEG-2, MPEG-4)► For the broadcasting (DVB-T, DVB-T2)
► Video coding standard: – MPEG-2 for freeview (SD); – MPEG-4 for pay TV;– MPEG-4 for freeview (HD) ;
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 6
► broadcasting standard : DVB-T
► On one multiplex : ► up to 6 programs in SD (MPEG-2)/ 10 programs in HD (MPEG-4)► Up to 3 programs in HD (MPEG-4)
2
The French technical audiovisual landscape
R2
Local channelR1
6 current multiplex* (R1, R2, R3, R4, R5, R6) + 2 additionnal (R7*,R8*) to be launched on 12th December. 25 freeview channels + 9 pay channels + 4 simulcast HD channels*1 multiplex = 1 frequency shared by multiple TV channels
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 7
R7*R8*
R6
R5
R4
R3MPEG-4 (pay T V)MPEG-4 (HD)
MPEG-2 (freeview)
Defining the DTT network
► All analogue transmitters have not been digitalized► 3500 analogue transmitters ► CSA elaborated a list of 1626 diogital transmitters
► More than 2 000 transmitters have not been digitalized. The viewers have► Either reoriented their antennas► Migrated to an alternative reception (most through free
satellite)
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 8
► The choice for digitalized transmitters was driven through two criterias : ► More than 1500 people for well covered areas► More than 500 people for least covered areas
► This ensured two objectives► A national target of 95 % for all multiplexes► An homogeneous local coverage of 91% for each département
This step was crucial to efficiently communicate on the digital coverage to the viewers in advance
24 regions have been successively switched off
Carefully designed :
- Technical areas but coherent with administrative boundaries
- No more than 8 main tranmitters per step
Switchover at the first semester 2010Switchover at the second semester 2010
Switchover at the firest semester 2011
Switchover at the second semester 2011
A progressive schedule
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 9
step
- simultaneous switch for main transmitters and relays
- less populated areas : at the beginiing
-Mountainous regions : at the end of the process (because of the large
number of transmitters)
Example of a frequency plan migration for the city of Dijon
former analogue (blue) plan+
First transtiory digital freq plan2nd digital freq plan
After ASO (6 mux)
3rd digital freq plan
(8 mux)
R7
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 10
R8
ASO 2013-2014 ?
1. ASO in France : Frequency planning
► target plan : the Geneva 2006 digital plan► adopted in the ITU radiocommunication conference held in
Geneva in June 2006
► First digital frequency plan (“transitory”)► Totally different from the Geneva 2006 plan► A lot of planning activities had to be undertaken during
simulcast between analogue and digital, in order to avoid interferences on analogue
► Second digial frequency plan (« plan de passage »)
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 11
► Second digial frequency plan (« plan de passage »)► After ASO, close to the Geneva 2006 plan► Sometimes different from the Geneva 2006 plan at some
local areas (because of the presence of analogue broadcasting in adjacent areas)
► Third digital frequency plan (« plan cible »)► launch of two additionnal multiplexes ► fully compliant with the Geneva 2006 plan
Frequency planning activities need to be carefully assessed
DTT roll-out in overseas territories
► A single multiplex (MPEG4) has been launched overseas in November 2010 with 10 TV programs ;
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 12
► ASO occurred between September and end of November 2011 in each individual territory
3
Comparison for the Simulcast in mainFrance and overseas territories
30 March 2005 Launch of DTT Feb. 2010
First regions toEnd Nov 2011 Dec 2012
•Main France
Long simulcast period
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 13
5 to 6 mux(R1 to R6)
First regions to be switched off
Last region to be switched off
2 new mux(R7-R8)
Overseasterritories
November 2010Introduction of
DTT in overseas territories
(1 mux ROM1)
November 2011Last regions to be
switched-off in overseas territories
shord simulcast period
1. The ASO experience : frequency planning
►Conclusion for first part 1. ASO experience : frequency planning :
► possibility to receive the DTT programs on a freeview satellite platform
► Assess carefully the frequency planning activities in order to avoid multiple frequency plans
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 14
► Coordinate the frequencies and the ASO schedule with the neighbouring countries, even across the sea
► Maximise the guard interval value in DVB-T- Advantage : possibility to plan a single frequency network as much as
possible (reuse distance more than 60 km)- Drawback : reduction of the number of TV programs
- MPEG2, SD, 64-QAM : 6 programs with a guard interval of 1/8 4 programs with a guard interval of 1/4
outline
►1. the ASO experience : frequency planning (preparation) ;
►2. the ASO experience : an operationnal challenge (deployment) ;
►3. After the ASO : what are the next steps ? (new standards, next transition)
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 15
►ASO = digital switch-over
2. the ASO experience : deployment (1/3)
►Who is concerned ?►The first isssue is to make people aware of their individual ASO date
(web engines, communication)► a schedule for the technical areas which is based on
administrative areas is much easier to be understood by the
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 16
yviewers
►Necessity to explain how to rescan the tuners after a frequency change►Difficulty for elderly people►Source of many phone calls the week of the ASO date in the region
2. the ASO experience : deployment (2/3)
►Coordination of the stakeholders
► imposed the power of the digital tranmsitters
► In SFN networks, to be implemented in a coherent way
► Alternative channels were sometimes implemented for a particular site, however, technical broadcasters had sometimes difficulties to inform each other.
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 17
other.
► It was very beneficial to organise common measurement campaigns when technical broadcasters disagreed
2. the ASO experience : deployment (3/3)
►Necessity to solve some local remaining difficulties in ►Not expected at the begining►Local adjustments in the frequency plan
►A very tight schedule : ►Final ASO date (30 November 2011) in the law : major objective
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 18
►Final ASO date (30 November 2011) in the law : major objective►An ideal schedule should leave sufficient time to :
►prepare the next region (before ASO) ►solve local difficulties due to wrong implementation (after ASO)
4
outline
►1. the ASO experience : frequency planning ;
►2. the ASO experience : an operationnal challenge (deployment) ;
►3. After the ASO : what are the next steps ? (new standards, next transition)
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 19
►ASO = digital switch-over
3. What are the next steps ? (1/3)
►Going to digital is a revolution that triggered new potentialities
● More TV programs● Better quality (picture and sound)● New services
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 20
● Mobile television● High definition (HD) services● Television on demand● Connected television and interactive services
Example of interactive services
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 21
3. What are the next steps ? (2/3)
► interactive services : European standart HbbTV
► CSA authorized the TV channels to use HbbTV standarts to develop interactive services for 3 years from June 2011
► Large scope of services : ► Catch-up TV► Video on demand► Online voting
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 22
g
► HD forum consortium have recently released terminal specifications► in order to solve Interoperability issues on the reception equipments.
3. What are the next steps ? (3/3)
► 2 standards :►For the video coding (MPEG2, MPEG4, HEVC)►For the broadcasting (DVB-T, DVB-T2)
► Next step : generalization of HD formats
► Transition for the video coding standard from MPEG 2/MPEG4 to
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 23
► Transition for the video coding standard from MPEG 2/MPEG4 to MPEG 4 only :►next step (after 2015) ►To be coupled with the introduction of DVB-T2 (HEVC ?)
► Transition of broadcasting standard from DVB-T to DVB-T2 : ►after next step (~2020)
THANKS FOR YOUR ATTENTION !
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 24
ANY QUESTION ?
5
Example of GE06 plan (channel 39, 626 MHz)
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 25
Migration from transitory plan (1) to « plan de passage » (2)
Transitory PlanTransitory Plan «« Plan de passagePlan de passage »»
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 26Source : CSASource : CSA
DTT means a richer offer for French viewers
Analog
In 2008
High Definition
Mobile (4G/LTE)
Since March 2005Digital
Analog broadcasting
Mobile contentcontent
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 27
Local content
Since 2007
Increasing the number
More local TV
Free-to-air TVDTT CHANNELS
Incumbent private channels
Public channels
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 28
Already on cable and satellite
New incomer DTT channels Already on cable
and satellite Launched for DTT
NEWS
GENERALISTS
MUSIC AND ENTERTAINMENT
PUBLIC CHANNELS(SELECTED BY THE FRENCH GOVERNMENT)
Main themes on DTT channels
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 29
YOUTH PAY TV
DTT coverage since DTT launch, in March 20052005 2006 200735 % of the population
112 main sites112 main sites
85 % of the population
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 3030
2008 2011
On 29 Nov. 2011 more than 96,7% of the
population covered
1626 sites1626 sites
6
The choice of the digital platform
85,8%91,6%
97,6%
Au moins un poste numérique
Réception hertzienne analogique terrestre exclusive
(26,2 millions de foyers)
At least one digital terminal
Households exclusively relying on analogue television
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 31 31
35,1%
46,3%
55,3%
63,8%70,3%
78,4%
42,6%
36,3%
29,1%
22,4%17,2%
12,9%7,9%
4,1%
2,0%S1 2007 S2 2007 S1 2008 S2 2008 S1 2009 S2 2009 S1 2010 S2 2010 S1 2011
(8,7 millions de foyers)
(0,5 million de foyers)
(10,6 millions de foyers)
Evolution of the population concerned by ASO
évolution de la population dans les régions passant au tout numérique
11,1
8
10
12
s d'
habi
tant
s)
60,0%
70,0%
80,0%
90,0%
100,0%
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 32
0,2
1,81,2
3,3 3,12,3
1,5 1,72,5
1,3 1,4
4,2
1,8 1,7
3,2
0,81,3 1,3
0,3
3,84,3
1,52,3
1,9
0
2
4
6
Che
rbou
rg
Als
ace
Bas
se-N
orm
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e
Pay
s-de
-Loi
re
Bre
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e
Lorra
ine
Cha
mpa
gne-
Ard
enne
Poi
tou-
Cha
rent
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Cen
tre
Bou
rgog
ne
Fran
che-
Com
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Nor
d
Hau
te-N
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Pic
ardi
e
Ile d
e Fr
ance
Aqu
itain
e
Lim
ousi
n
Auv
ergn
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Côt
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Azu
r
Cor
se
Rhô
ne
Pro
venc
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es
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illon
popu
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0,0%
10,0%
20,0%
30,0%
40,0%
50,0%
Digitalized secondary « network »
1000
1626
10001200140016001800
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 33
32 75113
247
606
0200400600800
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
New digital services
HD channels at the end of 2008:– 4 free-to-air channels:– 1 pay channel:
1st December 2008: all HD TV sets and recorders sold shall contain a HD DTT decoder (and any TV set after december 2012)
2012 : 6 new HD channels will be selected by CSA (digital dividend)
HIGH DEFINITION and digital dividend
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 34
2012 : 6 new HD channels will be selected by CSA (digital dividend)
Répartition du parc de téléviseurs installésSource : Simavelec
70 %45 %
22 %6 %
22 %
34 %
43 %46 % 40 %
8 % 21 %35 % 48 % 59 %
0
20
40
60
80
100
2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
TV analogiques TV Numériques simple définitionTV Numériques haute définitionAnalog TV sets High definition digital TV sets
Simple definition digital TV sets
Households installed TV sets split of
Different reception platforms in France
One digital
terrestrial
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 35S1 2009 S2 2009 S1 2010
Exclusive
Analog
terrestrial
free digital
satelite
Web engine for the coverage
WWW.CSA.FR : « MA COUVERTURE TNT »
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 36
7
Analogue refarming to enable digital roll-out
1200 refarmed frequencies (« réaménagéments ») on 800 sites enabled the deployment of DTT on ~100 main sites
CSA - BSEC dec. 2012 37
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1
PRACTICAL GUIDELINES
SWITCHING TO DIGITAL TELEVISION
SWITCHING TO DIGITAL TELEVISION
Istanbul, December 3th 2012
OVERVIEW
• Context of the digital TV transition
• Main transition challenges
• French experience
- 2 -
• Practical guide
• Keys points of the guide
Transition to digital: a global phenomenon
• International coordination by the ITU - Countries must respect agreements GE 06 and the decisions of
WRC12.
• Over 100 countries did their ASO between 2005 and 2011 (no later than 31/12/2012 for the countries of the European Union) – Europe, USA, Japan ...
- 3 -
• Countries of the ITU Region 1 (including Africa, Persian Gulf, Middle East, Russia and Mongolia) committed themselves to do so before :
– June 17, 2015 End of the extinction of the analog UHF (470-862 MHz)
– June 17, 2020 End of the extinction of the analog in the VHF band (174-230 MHz)
• In Latin America and Oceania, no formal deadline but all countries in working process.
E.g. Africa and DTT
Schedule adopted at the conference UAT / ITU in March 2012, in Bamako
• September 2012: End of informal discussions for frequency coordination and start of formal amendments on GE-06 planification.
• December 2012: Adoption of a common standard for digital broadcasting in the sub-regional area in Africa.
- 4 -
• June 2013: Finalization of national legislative and regulatory frameworks in the transition to digital TV and the allocation of the digital dividend. End of the frequency planning (national and international) for the deployment of digital television and the extinction of the analog TV.
• September 2013: Beginning of the deployment of digital TV
• June 2014: Start of the extinction of the analog UHF signal
• June 17, 2015: End of the extinction of the analog UHF (UHF ASO)
Two phases for the transition
• Preparation phase from June 2012 to June 2013 – Preliminary studies, feasibility studies – Definition of technical, economical and political strategies– Publication of laws and decrees
- 5 -
• Deployment phase from September 2013 to June 2015 – Creation of national unique broadcaster (recommended)– Deployment of digital TV – Digital development – Extinction of analogue
PRINCIPE DE RETROPLANNING
juin‐12 J A sept‐12O N dec‐12 J F M A M juin‐13J A sept‐13O N D J F M A M juin‐14J A S O N D J F M AM juin‐15 Juillet ….
Choix de la norme Max
rédaction Loi/ Norme
Instance de coordination
Définition des options stratégiques
Paysage audiovisuel voulu
Choix culturel
Aménagement du territoire
Aides et accompagnement
Schéma national d'arrêt
Valorisation dividende Réalisation Dividende ? Réalisation dividende ?
Conception plan d'affaires
Création observatoire marché
Evaluation coûts
Evaluation recettes
6 / 86 / 8
Implication amont de tous les acteurs
Organisme de gestion et suivi du passage
Diagnostic préalable réseau
Constitution Sté de diffusion
procédure appels d'offres
Coordination Max
Planification des fréquences Max
Adaptation cadre législatif max
Diagnostic cadre existant
organisation paysage audiovisuel
intégration chaînes et opérateurs privés
Formationstechniques
Déploiement du réseau TNT
Extinction progressive de l'analogique UHF Fin
Comm. GP Comm. GP Comm. GP
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2
Transition issues, a national and sovereign choice
Taking into account:
• policy decisions
- 7 -
• resources
• digital convergence
French experience, a proven record of success
In metropolitan area• March 2005, launch of DTT.• 2009, 85% of the population covered by 600 broadcast transmitters.• November 2011: 97% of the population covered with 1626 transmitters
2/3 network deployed within less than 2 years. • Chosen standard DVB-T / MPEG 2 & DVB-T / MPEG4 for HD• Phasing : three pilot areas in 2009, ramping up fast schedule (10 regions in
2010, 14 in 2011)
- 8 -
• ASO: November 30, 2011.
French overseas territories• Launch of DTT in December 2010. ASO between September and November
2011 (within less than 11 months). • Chosen standard DVB-T MPEG4 • Transition strategy adapted to the specific situation of each area (cultural,
economical, technical aspects taken into consideration)
Despite a very tight schedule100% French households equipped 86% of French people pleased
Organisation and assessment
Organisation • A operational steering committee GIP France Télévision Numérique (FTN), to
coordinate the whole process, - A central office plus regional outlets in each of the 24 regions + overseas. - Regional delegations present in a region for 10 months. - Highest FTN number of employees, including the central and regional
structures, was 76 in late 2010.• Work closely with the CSA (planning and control deployment) ANFR (tests and
- 9 -
Work closely with the CSA (planning and control deployment), ANFR (tests and measurements)
• Involvement of all stakeholders: national commission transition advisory committee ...
Financial statements of the digital transition• Cost for the French State € 102 million, cost for TV companies € 46 million • Construction of the network (broadcast operators) € 160 million, charged to the
multiplex • Dividend income: 2.6 billion Euros.
Proven track record of French cooperation on ASO
Numerous cooperatio