India postponing 12 minute ad-rules?
August 16, 2013
By Chris Forrester
India’s broadcasting minister is recommending that the 12 minutes of advertising per hour rule be relaxed until the end of next year. The rules were due to come into force in October, and have been fought by the industry.
The Ministry has reportedly changed its mind because the broadcasting industry says that by September 2014 the nation’s switch to digital transmission will be mostly complete, and broadcasters will enjoy the higher revenues from honest viewing numbers. The extra revenues, say broadcasters, will compensate them from the lost advertising minutes.
India’s broadcasting regulator had ruled in May 2012 that general entertainment broadcasters cut their advertising minutes from 16 minutes per hour, and that news channels trim from 20 minutes per hour, to a flat 12 minutes from October 1st. However, even these generous time allowances were being flouted and TRAI had found some news channels carrying up to 30 minutes of advertising per hour.
India’s telecom regulator TRAI has made no comment.
Other posts by :
- SES announces €0.25c dividend
- Russia “blinding and destroying” German satellites
- Bank: AST, Starlink, Kuiper targeting $200bn market
- Rivada: Is no news good news?
- SES celebrates Intelsat acquisition
- Pakistan halts broadband direct-from satellite
- India stymies Starlink launch
- Starlink, AST SpaceMobile race for cellular consumers
- Trouble ahoy for foreign D2D satellites over India?