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News
Screen Digest - High Definition Television: Global
uptake and assessment to 2010 (24/3/2006)
With only 12 weeks to go before the World
Cup kicks off in Germany, European pay TV operators have only just
started to ship HD ready set top boxes. European players are struggling
to get HD-capable set-top-boxes in sufficient numbers for consumers
to be able to view the World Cup in high definition quality. These
delays have been caused by a shortage of the necessary MPEG-4 chipsets.
Premiere in Germany, TPS in France, Sky Italia
in Italy, Canal Digital in the Nordic and the BBC will all be broadcasting
games in HD format but without the adequate set-top boxes the 'HD
ready' households (those who own 'HD ready' TV sets) will not be
able to watch them in HD quality.
A new report from media research company
Screen Digest - High Definition Television: Global uptake and assessment
to 2010 - paints a rosier bigger picture though and believes that
all the necessary conditions are now in place for a sustainable
lift off of HD television in Europe in the mid-term.
Vincent LŽtang, Screen Digest Senior Analyst
and author of the report states: "The June World Cup in Germany
was supposed to be the perfect kick-start for HD in Europe and its
full thrust will be partly missed, but this does not jeopardize
the introduction of HDTV. The strongest driver for HD TV is the
fantastic success of flat panel television sets in Europe at the
moment and the fact that a growing proportion of those are featuring
HD resolution screens, which are standardised by the 'HD ready'
Europe-wide label introduced in 2005."
At the end of 2005 there were already 2m
'HD ready' TV households in Europe and by 2010 there will be more
than 50m 'HD ready' TV sets, creating large opportunities for European
pay TV operators. Screen Digest predicts that by 2010 there will
be approximately 100 HD channels available in Europe and more than
11m households will be actually watching television in HD quality
(receiving HD broadcasts on HD ready sets and set-top boxes).
Across the globe HD has already made its
mark and in early 2006, HD broadcasts were available in 12 countries:
USA, Canada, Japan, Australia, South Korea, China, Germany and Austria,
and the Nordic markets (Sweden, Finland, Denmark, Norway). By the
end of 2005 there were 19m households with HDTV sets in the US (17%
of total TV households) with 11m of these watching HD broadcasts.
At the same time 14% (6.7m) of TV households in Japan were HD ready.
On a global basis, by the end of 2010 the
number of HD ready households will reach 174m or 22% of TV households.
The figure will be 59% in the US, 66% in Japan and 30% in Western
Europe.
In a maturing pay TV market European operators
have great expectations for HD as an effective marketing tool to
increase revenue per subscriber, to reduce churn and to increase
subscriber numbers. Consumer surveys show that consumers are more
than ever demanding higher quality television and are ready to pay
for the necessary hardware and service. BSkyB identifies HD as a
key factor in its quest to reach 10m subscribers by 2010.
LŽtang also states: 'The HD proposition will
come progressively but ultimately high definition will become the
standard quality of television. In the mid term, pay TV operators
will be able to extract direct new revenue from HD early adopters
through HD tiers and next-generation HD-capable PVR set-top boxes.
And this will drive a global migration to MPEG-4, resulting in savings
in transmission in the long term'.
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