Tag: Ministry of Information and Broadcasting

  • Broadcast media sector FDI norms see minor tweaks in govt’s fresh announcement

    Broadcast media sector FDI norms see minor tweaks in govt’s fresh announcement

    NEW DELHI: The government of India yesterday issued a comprehensive FDI policy for various sectors where a slight change has been noticed in the media sector from what had already been announced in June 2016. Now, 100 per cent FDI is allowed in cable TV and HITS under automatic route for both digital and non-digital carriage services.

    For those segments of the media where automatic FDI approval is not granted and a government okay is needed, it would now be the nodal ministry — Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) — that would be responsible for the green signal instead of Commerce Ministry’s Foreign Investment Promotion Board, a division that has been now dismantled as part of government’s bid to make easy doing business in India.

    public://b1_0.jpg

    FDI in broadcast carriage services like teleports, DTH, cable networks (both MSOs and LCOs for DAS and non-DAS areas), mobile TV, headend-in-the-sky broadcasting service (HITS) is 100 per cent under automatic route.

    The foreign investment limit (FDI) in terrestrial broadcasting of FM Radio and up-linking of news and current affairs TV channels remain at 49 per cent subject to government approval. Up-linking and downlinking of non-news and current affairs TV channels continue to be 100 per cent under automatic route.

    public://b2.jpg

    Publishing of newspaper and periodicals dealing with news and current affairs  and publication of Indian editions of foreign magazines dealing with news and current affairs have a 26 per cent FDI limit subject to government approval.

    The head of an MSO company, on condition of anonymity, said it’s slightly confusing as to why it has been stated that 100 per cent FDI is allowed for carriage services like cable TV and HITS in both digital and non-digital areas  under automatic route.

    Though the government is of the opinion that 100 per cent digitization has been achieved in the country, broadcast carriage industry (MSOs and LCOs) insist there analog pockets in the country persist as set-top-boxes are still being seeded in small towns and rural areas.

    The government has also notified — most of it reiteration of earlier policy decision — detailed conditions for the broadcast media and they can be viewed at http://dipp.nic.in/sites/default/files/CFPC_2017_FINAL_RELEASED_28.8.17.pdf:

    ALSO READ:

    Radical changes in FDI regime; Most sectors on automatic FDI route

    I&B Sector brings in over $1.25 billion  FDI between October 2014 and May 2016

     

     

     

  • PSU spending on ads small compared to DAVP

    NEW DELHI: Public sector organisations had made a commitment of spending Rs 22,72,766 for advertisements released through the Directorate of Advertising and Visual Publicity (DAVP) during 2016-17.

    The ministry of information and broadcasting (MIB) sources said the committed expenditure in previous years was: 2014-15 – Rs 12,28,390 and 2015-16 – Rs 18,98,370.

    A total sum of Rs 12.8577 billion was spent in 2016-17 in advertisements on various media by DAVP, the Parliament was told last month. As against this, the total expenditure in 2014-15 was Rs 9.9834 billion and Rs 11.888.5 billion in 2015-16.

    Also read:

    DAVP ads: Audio-visual medium gets lion’s share 

    DAVP to ensure max publicity: MIB seeks ‘Quit India’ commemoration details from ministries

    DD invites short films on Govt schemes, ‘DAVP producers’ preferred

  • MIB flags issue of anti-national content on cable channels, seeks industry advisory

    NEW DELHI: Ministry of information and broadcasting (MIB) is seeking an advisory from the Indian media and entertainment industry on a number of issues, including ways to track and stop so-called anti-national content being aired on some local cable TV channels, which do not need to register with any government body.

    In a meeting held in MIB’s headquarters in the Capital’s Shastri Bhawan yesterday, senior officials put forth their concerns to the industry representatives and sought their help in resolving the issues, which have been flagged in various sections of the government, including the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) responsible for internal security.

    Government sources indicated that  the MHA has requested MIB to look into the issue of cable channels being run by some LCOs in states like Tamil Nadu, Jammu & Kashmir and Uttar Pradesh where `objectionable’ content  aimed at flaring sectarian passions were being telecast. Some such cable channels are also said to be illegally downloading unencrypted content from foreign TV channels for rebroadcast in various parts of India.

    As cable channels run by LCOs or MSOs or similar channels on a DTH platform as part of value-added services or VAS are not yet required to register with the government, officials find it difficult to zero down on cable channels especially. As LCOs are required to register with the local post offices, a common database of such Indian LCOs is also not there for effective tracking, as admitted by a government official, who hastily added that work on creating a LCO database is underway.

    As part of its many set of recommendations to streamline the carriage part of the cable and broadcast business, regulator TRAI had suggested  that the government tweak relevant regulations to specify that all cable channels run by LCOs too would have to get government license like satellite or cable-delivered  TV channels. However, because of effective lobbying by LCO organizations, MIB is yet to act on the regulator’s suggestions on cable channels.

    Government sources indicated that more such meetings may be held with industry reps to understand and find solutions to issues linked to country’s national interest.

    ALSO READ:

     

    Peace TV saga & absence of rule of law

     

    Indian govt warns against re-transmission of Peace TV illegally

  • MIB scheme evaluation: Revised tenders invited from 20

    NEW DELHI: Nine more agencies have been added to the revised tender for the evaluation of its schemes to be continued beyond the 12th Plan by the ministry of information and broadcasting, taking the total number of short-listed agencies to 20.

    Interestingly, development of community radio and anti-piracy programme in the film sector which were a part of the tender notice of 6 June have been taken off the new list of schemes to be covered. The number of schemes has also been reduced to seven and their sub-schemes against 12 in the earlier tender announcement.

    Tenders have been invited by 24 July and will be opened on the morning of 27 July in the presence of authorised representatives of the bidders. The ministry has made it clear that it is not permissible for the addresses to transfer this invitation to any other institution.

    A notice on the website of the ministry includes Terms of Reference (TOR) of the Schemes for Assignment, the standard form of certificates to be included in the proposal and the standard form of agreement. The evaluation of the proposals will be done by the Evaluation Committee.

    A detailed proposal including the technical bid and the financial bid need to be submitted in two separate sealed covers. The reference number of the letter and the title of the assignment should be superscribed on the envelope containing the proposal.

    The short-listed agencies are:

    1. Academy of Management Studies,
    2. AFC India Ltd.,
    3. National Institute for Entrepreneurship and Small Business Development (NIESBUD),
    4. MAPCON Limited,
    5. Datamation Consultants Pvt. Ltd.,
    6. Chrome Data Analytics & Media
    7. Transnational Altemate Learning for Emancipation and Empowerment through Multimedia (TALEEM),
    S. GFK Mode Pvt. Ltd.,
    9. Development & Research Services Pvt. Ltd.,
    10. Nielsen (India) hrt. Ltd.,
    I l. Sigma Research and Consulting Pvt. Ltd.,
    12. Ipsos Research Pvt. Limited.,
    13. Sreejak Media Pvt. Ltd.,
    14. IMRB Intemational,
    15. Kadence Research lndia Pvt Ltd.
    16. Mott McDonald Pvt. Ltd.,
    17. Operations Research Group Pvt. Ltd.,
    18. KPMG, Building No. 10,
    19. McKinsey & Company,
    20. Quality Council of India.

    The schemes include:

    Broadcasting Sector

    Prasar Bharati

    a) Grant in aid to Prasar Bharati
    b) Grant in aid to Prasar Bharati for Kisan Channel

    Film Sector

    i)  Infrastructure Development Programme relating to Film Sector
    a)  Upgradation, modernisation and expansion of CBFC and certification process
    b)  Upgradation ofSiri Fort Complex
    c)  Upgradation of building infrastructure of Films Division
    d)  Grant-in-Aid to FTII – U pgradation and Modernisation ofFTll
    e)  Infrastructure development in SRFTI
    ii) Development Communication & Dissemination of Filmic Content a)  Promotion  of Indian  cinema  through film festivals and film markets in India and abroad
    b)  Production of films and documentaries in various Indian languages
    c)  Webcasting of Film Archives
    d)  Acquisition of archival films and film material
    iii)National Film Heritage Mission
    iv) Setting up a Centre of Excellence for Animation, Gaming and VFX (NCoE)

    Information Sector

    i)   Media Infrastructure Development Programme
    a)  Revamping & Restructuring of DA VP
    b)  Modernisation of PIB
    c)  Opening up of New Regional Centers of IIMC
    d)  Revitalisation, upgradation and modernisation of Publications Division and Employment News
    e)  National Centre of Photography and Special Drive for North Eastern States
    f)   Strengthening of RNT Headquarters

    ii) Development Communication & Information Dissemination
    a)  People’s Empowerment through Development Communication (Conception and Dissemination)
    b)  Media Outreach Programme and Publicity for Special Events
    c)  Direct Contact Programme by Directorate of Field Publicity
    d)  Live Arts and Culture
    e)  Social Media Platform

    Also read:

    MIB scheme evaluation: Tenders invited from Chrome DM, IMRB & Nielsen etc

    Tenders invited for agency to evaluate MIB schemes in information, broadcasting and films

     

     

     

  • NDTV moves Delhi HC challenging CBI raids

    NEW DELHI: The Prannoy Roy family-promoted NDTV has moved the Delhi High Court challenging the raids conducted by Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) in the residence of its promoters.

    In a notice to the Bombay Stock Exchange and National Stock Exchange, the company said, “NDTV and its promoter company filed a writ in the Delhi High Court (on 6 July 2017) challenging the CBI raids and the FIR (first information report) issued by CBI. NDTV is pleased that the court has directed the CBI to submit a status report by 21 September, 2017.”

    The publicly traded company, which also at one time had investments from American company GE via a group media company for a venture, further informed the stock markets it would not like to comment on the matter further as it was “now sub- judice”.

    In June 2017, the CBI had raided the residence of the Roy family alleging that the promoters and a private company linked to the Roys, RRPR Holding Private Ltd, were involved in defrauding a private sector bank, ICICI Bank, and allegedly causing it losses involving loans extended in 2008.

    The raids had come within a few days after a female NDTV news anchor had politely ticked off a belligerent spokesperson from the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), the lead political party in the NDA government that rules the country, during a TV debate, which had prompted a large section of the Indian society, including the Roys, to dub the raids by federal investigating agency as a “witch hunt” against media not toeing a government-handed political narrative.

    Minister for information and broadcasting M. Venkaiah Nadu, however, last month had brushed aside criticism relating to government efforts to muzzle a free media saying the CBI raids and media freedom were two unconnected issues.

    For NDTV — considered a sort of media nursery for TV journalism in India after the country allowed in mid-1990s private sector players to enter the business of broadcasting dominated till then by pubcaster Doordarshan and All India Radio — this was not the first brush with controversy. Earlier also unsubstantiated allegations relating to financial misdeeds had been leveled against NDTV and some group companies.

    ALSO READ:

    News Broadcasters Association expresses concern over NDTV raids

    Update: No politics in raids at NDTV offices, CBI must have received some info, says Naidu

  • BARC India to halt analogue measurement from July, up overall data collection

    NEW DELHI: India’s audience measurement company Broadcast Audience Research Council of India (BARC India) will stop reporting on analogue TV homes’ data from 1 July 2017 with the exception of one State and will add homes with new boxes to augment data collection.

    “We will also stop reporting all analogue homes across the country with the exception of Tamil Nadu from 1July 2017,” BARC India CEO Partho Dasgupta told indiantelevision.com, adding that hopefully the South Indian state too would soon come within the ambit of normal measurement process.

    The move to stop collecting and make available analogue home audience data seems to be aimed at nudging distribution platforms to stop analogue signals and a big hint to TV channels that in a digitized India it was best to go the digital way.

    Dasgupta, who was interacting with indiantelevision.com in an exclusive interview on the occasion of BARC India’s second anniversary, while dwelling on temporary hiccups, said, “With the current digitization mandate for Tamil Nadu, hopefully, analoguereporting will also stop soon there too. All this may lead to some interim flux, but in the long term will improve robustness of our viewership data.”

    The Tamil Nadu-Government run Arasu Cable TV Corporation (TACTV) was granted provisional digital license by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) in April 2017 to operate as a multi-system operator in the state. The late clearance was based on a rider that the MSO switches off analogue signals in the entire state within three months.

    As part of a wide-ranging interview, Dasgupta informed that BARC India’s annual exercise, which is also part of a government mandate, will also see new meter homes (called BAR-o-meters) added this calendar year.

    “This year we will see our (pan-India measurement) panel expanding from 20,000 to 30,000 reporting homes,” Dasgupta said, adding, “Combined with the newly added homes, we will also be seeding some new homes as part of our regular churn policy.”

    The government while giving clearance to BARC India, a joint venture amongst IBF, AAAI and the Indian Society of Advertisers, had made it clear that the number of homes used for data collection should reach 50,000 within a five-year period. BARC India’s predecessor was TAM India, a joint venture between global companies Nielsen and WPP-owned Kantar Media.

    Confirming an earlier indiantelevision.com new story on BARC exploring avenues to collaborate with Indian DTH platforms for return path data (RPD) to augment data collection, Dasgupta said, “We are trying to innovate (with) panel expansion by tying up directly with key DTH and digital cable operators to enable return path (audience) data.”       

    Without disclosing a time-frame for such data-boosting tie-ups with DTH ops, Dasgupta explained, “Our tie-up with DTH operators and MSOs for RPD is an attempt (to bring about more robustness). This will not only increase the number of sample panel homes, but will also make infiltration efforts ineffective. We will innovate more on the meter technology front.”

    Stay tuned for the full interview of Dasgupta, which will be on air soon.

    ALSO READ:

    BARC India in talks with DTH ops, MSOs for RPD to boost robustness

    Arasu gets provisional MSO licence subject to analogue switch-off in three months

    BARC EKAM: Learning online behaviour & ROI from specific campaigns will be easier, industry says

     

  • Viacom18 chief: Indian media sector can create 10 mn jobs over next decade

    NEW DELHI: Making a strong case for the Indian media and entertainment (M&E) sector as a major employment generator in the country and which can blunt job automation up to an extent, Viacom18 group CEO Sudhanshu Vats said that it, along with ancillary sectors, has the potential to “create at least 10 million” jobs over the next decade.

    “I say this because in other sectors also the skills needed in our sector will be the same ones needed to ensure that the workforce remains competitive. Therefore, in a future where jobs are going to get automated, our sector (M&E) is part of the (employment) solution,” Vats said while delivering a keynote address at the CII-organised Global Exhibition on Services 2017 at Greater Noida, on the outskirts of Delhi.

    Pointing out that in a future where jobs are going to get automated and India’s M&E sector can lend a helping hand, Vats exhorted on Tuesday policymakers present from India and abroad at the event that they must do everything in their power to “grow” the M&E sector over the next decade. “For my industry colleagues from different parts of the world, no matter which country or sub-sector of our industry you represent, I’m going to explain to you why the singular stereotype of ‘Indian content’ is a myth and why you need to help our industry shatter this myth as you take our message to the world,” he added.

    In an address, given in the presence of Indian and foreign dignitaries, including Minister of State for Information & Broadcasting Rajyavardhan Rathore, Vats went beyond clichés and said, “World over the economic narrative is moving from simply GDP growth and wealth-creation to ‘job creation’. And this is important, because as societies evolve, it is extremely important for the growth to be equitable and productive.”

    According to Vats, discussions in India have focused around the importance of India’s services sector in exports, job creation and GDP growth or the need for India to build the M&E sector as the next IT sector given the ‘creativity endowment’ or “slightly more nuanced” themes such as inter-linkages between manufacturing and services policy measures that can unleash the country’s true potential.

    “However, I am going to take a different two-pronged approach. An approach that is both critical and interesting. Most of you here will agree with me when I say that in the new world of media where OTT platforms have become mainstream and digital audiences are much sought after, it’s important to tailor-make messages that are relevant to the audience,” Vats said in an address that mixed practical economics with policy-making, adding he had two distinct messages for “two distinct sets of stakeholders” that have gathered at the GES 2017.

    “If you look at the pace at which jobs are changing, you’ll be surprised. If my 18-year-old daughter told me 10 years back that she wanted to be an ‘app designer’ I wouldn’t have understood what she meant. Ten years back the first I-phone was launched and Android came much later. India has a workforce that’s anywhere in the 460-480 million range and 10-15 million Indians are being added to the workforce each year. This is likely to continue for another 10 years at least,” Vats said highlighting the USP of India — growing workforce.

    And, then he went on to explain his theory why India’s M&E sector was an important clog in the country’s overall economic growth: “Automation won’t make all jobs across a sector or two redundant but certain ‘kinds of jobs’ (especially ‘routine ones’) across several sectors redundant. If you break down jobs performed by us in the M&E sector, a large bulk of them is actually non-routine. This is because of the importance of creativity in everything that we do and the need to create content that will appeal to human beings, making our sector a key creator of high-value-added jobs that will be relatively ‘automation-proof’ in the future.”

    Dwelling on the versatile content with universal appeal that India generates annually, which should be taken advantage of globally, Vats told the audience, “The versatility of our content is mind-boggling. We have created a mega-property out of a local sport; we have regional language content on a wide variety of themes (mythological, super natural, comedy, drama, action, mystery, animation, etc.); we have our own non-scripted formats; we have a wide variety of films in different languages – our spectrum of content is endless. All you need to do is to find the right partner and make the right effort in taking these stories to your part of the world.”

    Vats message to the audience and Indian policy-makers was simple, yet clear: over the next decade, India’s growth, coupled with the government’s measures, might be able to absorb some of the growing job-seekers, but closer to 2027, it is likely to find itself in a spot where even if the supply of jobs matched the demand, the skill sets needed might not match those available with job-seekers as a “robot can perform those jobs better”. Hence, M&E sector with its vast opportunities could be a savior.

  • Arasu DAS licence: Stakeholders fear flurry of similar requests & permissions

    NEW DELHI: Even as Tamil Nadu state government-backed MSO Tamil Nadu Arasu Cable TV Corp (TACTV) expressed satisfaction at getting the DAS license after “five years of struggle”, some other stakeholders felt this move by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting may go against a policy recommendations by sector regulator TRAI and, possibly, open up floodgates for similar requests from other local governments.

    TACTV general manager Ramana Saraswathi, while welcoming the development, told indiantelevision.com that the matter about shuttering analogue signals within three months was something that the state government would decide.

    She said that TACTV would await government instructions. Incidentally, the state government in Tamil Nadu state is an ally of the BJP-led NDA coalition that is in power in New Delhi.

    While officially analog has had a sunset on 31 March 2017 in India, MIB’s internal review of the ground situation revealed that full digital play is yet to be a reality. The Andhra Pradesh state government, meanwhile, had exhorted MIB to extend the March 2017 deadline, which had received no official feedback from MIB.

    However, not everybody was as upbeat as Arasu. Most MSOs and LCOs outside Tamil Nadu, contacted by indiantelevision.com, made clear their apprehension saying this might “open the floodgates” and “other state governments may take advantage” of this by regularising or floating MSO companies, which will indirectly help politicians control what all gets aired and what all people can watch.

    One Andhra-based MSO said that an inter-ministerial committee had itself held that the matter was one of policy that should be decided by the MIB. LCO Sky Vision managing director R S Raju said that when TRAI has submitted a series of recommendations on why government or semi-government bodies should not be allowed in TV distribution business, which are awaiting a final decision at MIB, such permissions, conditional or otherwise, send a wrong signal to the industry players.

    Saharsh Damani of the All India Digital Cable Federation (AIDCF) said the organization would study the government order in detail and then give an official reaction.

    In August 2014, TRAI had suggested barring political parties from entering into broadcasting space, while it recommended several restrictions on the corporate houses in this regard.  It had made a similar recommendation in December 2012 and earlier in November 2008.

    “Ownership is a huge concern… how do you know that a TV channel operated out of Bhopal owned by a local MLA or MP is conveying the truth rather than tinted version of the truth. This is one problem with political ownership,” the then TRAI chairman Rahul Khullar had said in 2014 while releasing recommendations on ‘Issues Relating to Media Ownership’.

    TRAI had suggested that entities, including political bodies, religious bodies, central and state government ministries and government funded entities be barred from entry into broadcasting and TV channel distribution sectors.

    The regulator even suggested that surrogates of such entities too “should be barred”.

    TRAI had pushed for enactment of a new legislation through an executive decision for its recommendations to be implemented, while suggesting an exit option should be provided in case permission to any such organizations had already been granted.

    Arasu’s conditional license makes things that much more difficult for MIB and other central government department to take a final decision on the regulator’s suggestions.

    ALSO READ:

    Arasu gets provisional MSO license subject to analogue switch-off in three months

    Can a MSO block a channel airing unfavourable poll survey?

    DAS: MSOs, LCOs give low figure of STB seeding, official sources admit it’s under 80%

  • MIB: No case of misleading ads in last three years

    NEW DELHI: Action was taken in only two cases of misleading advertisements for violation of the Advertising code in 2014 and there has been no action since, the minister of state for information and broadcasting Rajyavardhan Rathore said in the Parliament.

    He said that advertisements telecast on private satellite TV channels are regulated by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) under advertising code prescribed under the Cable Television Network Rules 1994 as listed out in the Cable Television Networks (Regulation) Act 1995.

    The code contains a whole range of parameters to regulate advertisements on TV channels. Rule 7 (5) of the advertising code specifically deals with misleading advertisements, which prescribes that no advertisement shall contain references which are likely to lead the public to infer that the product advertised or any of its ingredients has some special or miraculous or super-natural property or quality, which is difficult to prove.

    The Department of Consumer Affairs has not fixed any criteria for veracity of advertisements of products related to daily use of consumer goods. However, Section 2(1)(r) of the Consumer Protection Act, 1986 provides that the practice of making any statement, whether orally or in writing or by visible representation, which falsely represents that the goods are of a particular standard, quality, quantity, falls under unfair trade practices.

    A consumer can make a complaint against unfair trade practice in a consumer forum established under the Consumer Protection Act, 1986. If the complaint is upheld by the forum, it can issue restraining orders.

    In response to another question, Rathore refused any update from the government stating that the case was in the Delhi High Court and, hence, sub judice. Broadcasters had challenged in court a provision in the Cable Act for advertisements to be limited to twelve minutes per hour.

    He said Rule 7(11) of the Rules provides that “no programme shall carry advertisements exceeding 12 minutes per hour, which may include up to ten minutes per hour of commercial advertisements and up to two minutes per hour of the channel’s self-promotional programmes”.

    The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) notified the regulation ‘Standards of Quality of Service (Duration of Advertisements in Television Channels) (Amendment) Regulations 2013’ on 22 March 2013 further amplifying the regulation.

  • MIB: No DPO request for infra sharing, DTH ops’ transponder demand up

    NEW DELHI: Though there is a committed demand from DTH service providers for 68 more satellite transponders, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) hasn’t yet received any proposal from any players to share amongst themselves satellite capacity or other distribution infrastructure.

    MIB minister M Venkaiah Naidu yesterday informed Parliament that DTH operators were presently using 104 Ku-band transponders, while there were additional needs as, according to Department of Space, demand for transponder capacity for DTH services has gone up with increase in introduction of high definition (HD) TV channels.

    The growth of usage of satellite transponders by DTH service providers in India, as listed out by MIB, over the last five years is as follows: March 2013 — 76; March 2014 — 77; March 2015 — 78; March 2016 — 87 March 2017 — 104.

    The Minister, acknowledging that sector regulator TRAI had given a set of recommendations on sharing of broadcasting infrastructure amongst players on a voluntary basis by tweaking certain rules, added that his ministry had not received any proposal from platform operators for sharing of satellite transponders and/or earth station facilities.

    The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India issued recommendations on sharing of infrastructure in television broadcasting distribution sector on 29 March 2017. These recommendations are available on TRAI’s website www.trai.gov.in.

    The objectives of these recommendations are to enable a policy environment for facilitating sharing of infrastructure in TV broadcasting distribution sector, on a voluntary basis. The sharing of the infrastructure is expected to enhance available distribution network capacities leading to reduction in capital and operative expenditure for the service providers, thereby bringing down the price of broadcasting services to subscribers.

    In addition, it would lower the entry barriers for new service providers and provide more space on broadcasting distribution networks for niche channels.

    India’s six private-sector DTH operators uplink signals of TV channels to different Indian and foreign satellites located at different orbital slots. Majority of the channels transmitted by operators are replicated across multiple platforms. This creates capacity constraints and also is a significant cost for each operator, thus making the service expensive, TRAI had observed while pushing for infrastructure sharing amongst distribution platforms.

    Hong Kong-based media industry advocacy group CASBAA in a report, issued in March 2016, had pointed that the DTH sector in India would grow in coming years as would demand for KU-band transponders and, while ISRO has been doing a commendable job, it’s unlikely to meet the market demands on Indian satellites, which will have to be provided for on foreign satellites.

    In the report, titled `Capacity crunch continues: Assessment of satellite transponders’ capacity for the Indian broadcast and broadband market’, CASBAA, amongst other things, had observed that to keep the vibrancy in the Indian broadcast sector alive, foreign transponder contracts need to be of longer durations (10–15 years) to allow Indian companies to leverage on cost economics and provide cost protection to DTH operators and allowing direct contracting for DTH operators to secure incremental capacity with existing satellite providers already authorized (by ITU and ISRO) to provide them service.