City
Epaper

TV distribution platforms given relief in amended tariff by TRAI

By IANS | Updated: July 8, 2024 22:20 IST

New Delhi, July 8 The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) on Monday issued tariff orders and regulations ...

Open in App

New Delhi, July 8 The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) on Monday issued tariff orders and regulations to reduce the regulatory burden on distribution platform operators (DPOs) amid the migration of pay-TV customers to other platforms.

The notified amendments said that ceilings of Rs 130 for 200 channels and Rs 160 on more than 200 channels have been removed on Network Capacity Fee (NCF) and “is kept under forbearance to make it market driven as well as equitable”.

Service provider may now charge different NCF based on number of channels, different regions, different customer classes or any combination thereof.

“DPOs have now been permitted to offer discount up to 45 per cent while forming their bouquets to enable flexibility for them in forming bouquets and to offer attractive deals to the consumers. Earlier this discount was permitted only up to 15 per cent,” said TRAI.

With the proliferation of HD television sets and to encourage transmission of high-definition content, “distinction between HD and SD channels has been removed for the purpose of carriage fee”.

According to TRAI, a pay channel available at no subscription fee on the DTH platform of the public service broadcaster has to be declared free-to-air by the broadcaster of the channel for all the addressable distribution platforms also so as to have a level-playing field.

“DPOs have been mandated to declare tariff of their platform services,” the regulatory body said.

The key objectives of these amendments is to facilitate growth of the broadcasting sector by reducing regulatory mandates and compliance requirements and provide flexibility to the service providers to adopt a market-driven approach while safeguarding the interest of the consumers and small players through transparency, accountability and equitability.

These amendments, except for few clauses, will come into force after 90 days from the date of its publication in the official gazette, said TRAI.

In 2017, TRAI had notified the Regulatory Framework for Broadcasting and Cable services.

The framework was further tuned to the need of the broadcasting ecosystem and to address the concerns of stakeholders through amendments issued in 2020 and 2022.

The stakeholders — broadcasters, MSOs, DTH operators and LCOs — had taken up further issues for the consideration of the Authority from time to time.

To address such issues, the Authority issued a consultation paper in 2023 for seeking stakeholders’ comments.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessQ-Line Biotech Limited IPO Opens on May 21, 2026

BusinessGroup 108 Shapes a New Retail Dialogue at PRC 2026 with ONE FNG and Grandthum

BusinessCaptain Polyplast Limited Secures Order for 500 Solar Pumps Worth Rs 11.8Cr from MSEDCL

Politics"We expect action against police officers involved": Keralam MLA Thomas on new SIT to probe 2023 attacks against Congress workers under Vijayan Govt

EntertainmentMaanvi Gagroo says her ‘Heer Sara Aur Pondicherry’ character is stubborn, jovial and naive

Business Realted Stories

BusinessNukleus Office Solutions Reports Strong FY26 Results with Total Income at ₹3,619 Lakh; EBITDA Jumps 38.12 Percent YoY

BusinessAI boom to spark USD 154 billion optical networking opportunity: Goldman Sachs

BusinessOorjaa Logistics Crosses 3 Million Daily Products in Intra-City Movement; Expands SaaS Stack 'Datashastra' to GCC

BusinessIndia’s 4 pc fuel price hike lowest among major economies

BusinessKotak warns of massive fuel under-recoveries despite recent Rs 3/litre price hike