Big broadcasters in India warn new tariff rules could
hit services
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[January 10, 2020] By
Shilpa Jamkhandikar and Alexandra Ulmer
MUMBAI (Reuters) - Some of the biggest
television broadcasters operating in India joined forces on Friday to
criticize new government regulations that impose restrictions on pay-TV
charges, saying the move could put some channels out of business.
Senior executives from India's Zee Entertainment <ZEE.NS>, Viacom18
Media, Sony Corp's <6758.T> local unit, The Walt Disney Co <DIS.N> and
its TV network Star India, got together to brief the media in Mumbai and
said excessive regulation will also crimp their ability to keep up with
technological advances.
"We're evaluating how we can challenge this," said N.P. Singh, Managing
Director and CEO for Sony Pictures Networks India.
The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) this month ordered
direct-to-home and cable operators to double the number of channels they
offer by charging a basic "network capacity fee" to 200, and capped the
charges for additional channels. It also reduced the price ceilings for
some channel offerings.
TRAI's decision, which comes in force from March 1, will reduce
customers' monthly bills but adversely hit the revenues and
profitability of broadcasters, according to the research arm of ratings
agency ICRA.
During Friday's event, industry executives also said the regulations
will further squeeze India's paid television industry which was already
battling intense competition from video streaming firms such as Netflix
<NFLX.O> and Amazon's <AMZN.O> Prime Video.
"The long term effects of this are going to be extremely destructive. I
don’t see a case of existence for the smaller channels ... most of them
will have to shut shop," said Uday Shankar, Star India's chairman.
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N.P. Singh, Managing Director and CEO for Sony Pictures Networks
India, speaks during a news conference in Mumbai, India, January 10,
2020. REUTERS/Prashant Waydande
TRAI's new tariff regulations come less than a year after it first asked
broadcasters to price channels individually, rather than grouping them into
packages, so as to allow customers to better make selections.
The move, however, was marred by confusion around implementation and forced the
TRAI to review the regulations.
TRAI's chairman, R.S. Sharma, has said the new revised regulations announced
this month were merely "fine-tuning" of the previous ones, and the regulator was
open to hearing the industry's grievances.
A government official said TRAI will review the industry's remarks made on
Friday before commenting further.
"TRAI's regulatory prescriptions may kill the paid broadcast TV model, impact a
large section of the creative ecosystem and compound India's economic troubles,"
said Vivan Sharan, a partner at India's Koan Advisory Group which advises
several big media companies.
Television advertising grew at a slower-than-expected rate of 12.4% in fiscal
year that ended March 2019, according to global consultants KPMG, as companies
have been spending less due to muted consumer sentiment in the country.
(Reporting by Shilpa Jamkhandikar and Alexandra Ulmer in Mumbai; Additional
reporting by Chris Thomas in Bengaluru; Editing by Aditya Kalra and Toby Chopra)
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