Media Minister has today set out how
commercial radio will be licensed over the next decade so that
listeners can continue to enjoy their stations of choice despite
rapid changes in technology and radio listening.
Nearly 60 per cent of all radio listening is now via digital
devices, but analogue stations remain an important platform for
millions of listeners who still tune into FM and AM radio
services every day.
Several FM and AM commercial radio licences are due to expire
from early 2022.
Provided the stations also broadcast on digital radio, the
government has decided to allow Ofcom to renew these analogue
licences for a further ten-year period.
As we move into an increasingly digital world we’re making sure
the licensing landscape for radio is fair and up-to-date and
allows audiences to enjoy a wide range of high-quality
stations.
Today’s step ensures there is no disruption for loyal listeners
of treasured FM and AM radio services such as Classic FM,
Absolute Radio and TalkSport over the next decade.
We will soon be turning our attention to providing similar
long-term certainty to support the future growth of digital
radio.
The government’s decision follows extensive consultation with
industry and clarifies the long-term licensing arrangements for
FM and AM radio services in the light of the shift to digital
listening.
It will help support further investment and innovation in DAB but
also provides certainty to commercial radio as it seeks to manage
the financial impact of coronavirus.
The legislation to amend the Broadcasting Act 1990 to enable
Ofcom to renew these licences will be laid in parliament shortly.
Following the decision on analogue licenses, the Government will
now consider the position of DAB multiplex licences. Multiplexes
consist of a number of digital radio stations transmitted on a
single frequency, which is a more efficient method of
transmission than analogue radio’s individual frequencies.
Government will consult on changes to extend national and local
digital radio multiplex licences by the end of 2020, in order to
help futureproof the radio industry’s wider licensing structure.
ENDS
Notes to editors:
- The Government has today published the response to a public
consultation on extending analogue commercial radio broadcasting
licences which ran from December 2019 to February 2020 and sought
views on whether these licences should be renewed, and if so how
long for. Read the consultation
response.
- Analogue (FM or AM) commercial radio licences are issued by
Ofcom under powers granted to them by section 86 of the
Broadcasting Act 1990. Such a licence permits a commercial radio
station to broadcast to a specific licensed geographic area
(known as the measured coverage area) in accordance with a
specified format (e.g. mainly speech-related requirements, such
as news) for a set period of time.
- Since the mid 1990s, the analogue licences of stations that
also provide a service in digital form (in practice, either via
digital audio broadcasting (DAB) or its successor technology,
DAB+) have benefited from an entitlement to claim a series of
renewals, in accordance with amendments made to the Broadcasting
Act 1990 by the Broadcasting Act 1996, the Communications Act
2003, the Digital Economy Act 2010 and the Legislative Reform
(Further Renewal of Radio Licences) Order 2015.
- A number of licences, including national analogue licences
for Classic FM and TalkSport, have used up their renewals and
were due to expire from early 2022. Ofcom now has the power to
renew these licences for a further period. The changes only
affect analogue commercial radio services. Digital radio and
community radio are subject to different licensing arrangements.
- DAB radio services are broadcast as multiplexes. A radio
multiplex consists of a number of DAB radio stations bundled
together to be transmitted digitally on a single frequency in a
given geographic area. This makes it a more efficient way of
transmitting sound signals compared to analogue radio, where
stations are broadcast on individual frequencies.
- The first national multiplex licence for commercial radio
expires in 2023 and the shift in listening to digital (more than
58% of all radio listening is now digital) means it is time for
the Government to consider the licensing arrangements for DAB
multiplexes.
- The Broadcasting (Radio Multiplex Services) Act 2017 gives
the DCMS Secretary of State a power to modify (through secondary
legislation) the various procedures to create Small Scale Radio
services. Ofcom has recently launched details of
their plans to start
licensing small scale radio later this year.