Recorded television viewing levels are continuing to decline, affecting
non-terrestrial channels for the first time in 12 months, according to the
latest quarterly IPA Trends in Television report.
The IPA
report found that average recorded daily television viewing levels have dropped
to 3.6 hours.
This decline has been attributed primarily to the increase of video-on-demand
services, IPTV and the availability of downloading services on the internet.
Digital reception continued to grow during the fourth quarter, according to
the IPA, and now stands at 72 per cent of all television households.
The growth is being driven by digital terrestrial channels, which have seen a
rise in share from 30.2 per cent to 34.9 per cent in the past quarter.
Lynne Robinson, research director at the IPA, said: "The latest results show
the popularity of digital terrestrial whose household penetration has grown by
nearly 10 percentage points in the last year."
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