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RADIO

Norway to be first to phase out FM radio

Norway is tuning out FM radio for good, and becoming the world's first country to put a date on the switchover to digital-only transmissions.

Norway to be first to phase out FM radio
The Tandberg Sølvsuper 9, a classic Norwegian radio of the 1960s. Photo: Stein Odland/Flickr
With digital promising better sound quality, easier tuning, more stations and features as well as lower costs for broadcasters, Norway's government has decided its FM airwaves will fall silent from January 11, 2017, starting in the far north above the Arctic Circle and gradually moving south.
 
"Nobody's ever done this before and it's quite a nervous time for everyone," James Cridland, a British-based radio broadcasting consultant told AFP, adding that many other countries planning the change will be watching closely.
 
"Norway is testing this out for all of us," he said.
 
After nearly a century of the analogue system, which revolutionised music listening with high-fidelity stereo sound compared to mono AM transmissions, the changeover to Digital Audio Broadcasting's advanced version (DAB+) will render the country's almost eight million radio sets obsolete.
 
Although 55 percent of Norwegian households already own at least one DAB radio, offering 22 crystal-clear channels with more on the way, some observers wonder whether definitively pulling the plug on FM will necessarily entice all its listeners to migrate to digital transmissions.
 
"It will be interesting to see whether they rush out and convert every single radio in their house to a DAB radio or to an online radio," says Cridland. "Or whether they conclude that we don't really need a radio anymore because we've got Spotify, Wimp, Deezer and all of these music services, and we've got Internet."
 
To further smooth the transition in a country where people tend to readily embrace new technologies, DAB was introduced in tandem with FM in 1995, with all the country's main public and private stations adopting both systems.
 
 Integrate with the Internet
 
Several countries could follow Norway's example in the coming years, notably Denmark, Sweden, Switzerland and South Korea. But others may take longer to make that change — if they make it at all.
 
"The technology is there," said Jean-Marc Dubreuil, a consultant at the industry group WorldDMB which promotes digital radio. "But you need the full ecosystem in place to make it happen, which is not always the case."
 
Like Norway, Britain also launched DAB two decades ago. But in 2013 the government announced that it would delay the planned 2015 shutdown of FM due to concerns over the slow spread of the new technology, and costs to smaller stations.
 
Sceptics, notably in the United States which lacks Norway's well-funded and dominant public broadcasting corporation NRK that has driven the change, continue to doubt in a DAB future.
 
Critics on the other side of the Atlantic point to the continued popularity of privately-owned AM talk-radio there, despite long predictions of its demise. They say that longevity offers proof that FM too is far from dead.
 
France introduced limited DAB broadcasts last year with little support from public stations, which were unable to meet the costs of running both systems in parallel.
 
The French roll-out also received little backing from private broadcasters who were dubious of the merits of a changeover, and more inclined to bank on the Internet being the future of radio.
 
Xavier Filliol, a French radio expert, sees DAB as a "transition technology" that will ultimately have to partly integrate with the Internet as people seek greater interactivity with the media they consume.
 
"I can't imagine that in five years' time there will be DAB without this 'return path' when the Net will have penetrated everything from fridges to cars," he said.

MEDIA

Up to 10 million people could be hit by threatened radio shut down

The airwaves across many parts of Germany could fall silent next week due to a financial dispute between radio stations and an FM broadcasting provider.

Up to 10 million people could be hit by threatened radio shut down
Photo: DPA

The company Media Broadcast announced on Friday that it would cut off FM broadcasters for several radio stations if they did not immediately fulfil certain payment demands.

“Up to 10 million radio listeners could be affected by their FM broadcaster being cut off from Wednesday onwards,” company head Wolfgang Breuer told Die Welt.

Major public service broadcasters such as MDR, NDR and Deutschlandfunk are among those who could be cut off, the newspaper reported.

The dispute began when Media Broadcast, formerly a subsidiary of Deutsche Telekom, decided to move focus away from FM radio and onto digital platforms last year.

The shift meant that broadcasting antennae across Germany, for which Media Broadcast had previously been responsible, were sold to private investors.

Broadcasters and their network operators were then left furious when many of the new owners raised prices for the use of their antennae, leading to a stalemate in business negotiations.

Hessian broadcaster FFH told dpa that a 50 percent rise in the cost of antennae use had left them with a “massive problem”.

In order to break the stalemate, Media Broadcast recently agreed to continue operating all antennae until the end of June, so as to provide more time for negotiations. Yet such an arrangement would still require the stations to contract the company during that period.

Media Broadcast now claims that around 75 percent of stations have not done this, and has threatened to cut these stations off if they do not officially contract the company by Monday.

Though digital and online streaming radio will still be available, the mass cut-off of FM radio broadcasts would affect a huge proportion of the population.

According to Bild, around 92.7 percent of Germans said they still preferred listening to radio on an analogue device in a poll last year.