Worldwide annual consumer spending on mobile broadcast TV services is
expected to exceed $6.6bn by 2012, according to a new report from
Juniper
Research.
The analyst firm predicts that nearly 120 million mobile users in more than
40 countries will receive broadcast TV services by 2012, compared to fewer than
12 million in 2007, and that DVB-H will be the dominant transmission standard.
However, the report warned that service providers face significant
technological and regulatory hurdles if they are to successfully build a
critical mass of subscribers.
Many commentators consider mobile TV to be something of a failed technology
in a market which is immature and fragmented.
This issue was highlighted after
BT and
Virgin
Mobile shut down their
mobile TV
services in July following the
European
Commission's
ratification of DVB-H
as the European mobile TV standard.
"The 'quasi-mandation' of DVB-H by the European Commission is a huge boost to
that standard," said Dr Windsor Holden, author of the Juniper Research report.
"But it creates uncertainty in the minds of those who might regard other
technologies as more cost effective, and might ultimately be counterproductive
as a measure to promote mobile TV."
The report also stressed the need for regulators to make relevant parts of
the radio spectrum available as soon as possible, and for vendors to ensure that
broadcast TV chipsets are rapidly introduced into mass market handsets to
facilitate adoption.
"The key to the take-up of services such as SMS and cameraphones was their
ubiquity. Everyone can send an SMS, and most people can now take a picture with
their handset," said Dr Holden.
"If companies are serious about achieving widespread adoption of mobile TV,
it is essential for chipsets to filter down very rapidly from top-of-the-range
handsets into the mass market models so that everyone has the opportunity at
least to sample mobile TV services."
The US will be the largest single market for mobile broadcast TV services in
2012, according to the report, followed by Japan and Italy.
The majority of revenue is expected to come from subscriptions and
pay-per-view services. Advertising will add an increasing, but still
supplementary, revenue stream for providers.
Juniper Research report:
Mobile
TV The Opportunity for Streamed & Broadcast Services 2007-2012
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