Mobile Bands" in Cept

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Mobile Bands European Communications Office (ECO) ECO REPORT 03 THE LICENSING OF "MOBILE BANDS" IN CEPT 27 April 2021 ECO REPORT 03 Page 2 / 204 TABLE OF CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY............................................................................................................................. 3 INTRODUCTION..........................................................................................................................................4 ANNEX 1: NATIONAL INFORMATION ON THE LICENSING OF MOBILE BANDS.................................. 6 Albania.................................................................................................................................................... 7 Andorra................................................................................................................................................... 8 Austria................................................................................................................................................... 10 Azerbaijan............................................................................................................................................. 15 Belarus..................................................................................................................................................16 Belgium................................................................................................................................................. 18 Bosnia and Herzegovina...................................................................................................................... 21 Bulgaria.................................................................................................................................................22 Croatia...................................................................................................................................................24 Cyprus...................................................................................................................................................27 Czech Republic.....................................................................................................................................30 Denmark................................................................................................................................................35 Estonia.................................................................................................................................................. 41 Finland.................................................................................................................................................. 44 France...................................................................................................................................................47 Georgia................................................................................................................................................. 54 Germany............................................................................................................................................... 56 Greece.................................................................................................................................................. 68 Hungary.................................................................................................................................................71 Iceland...................................................................................................................................................74 Ireland................................................................................................................................................... 77 Italy........................................................................................................................................................82 Latvia.....................................................................................................................................................95 Liechtenstein.........................................................................................................................................99 Lithuania..............................................................................................................................................103 Luxembourg........................................................................................................................................ 106 Malta................................................................................................................................................... 109 Moldova...............................................................................................................................................112 Montenegro.........................................................................................................................................115 Netherlands.........................................................................................................................................118 North Macedonia................................................................................................................................ 123 Norway................................................................................................................................................125 Poland.................................................................................................................................................139 Portugal...............................................................................................................................................144 Romania..............................................................................................................................................149 Russian Federation.............................................................................................................................151 Serbia..................................................................................................................................................155 Slovakia...............................................................................................................................................157 Slovenia.............................................................................................................................................. 175 Spain...................................................................................................................................................179 Sweden............................................................................................................................................... 186 Switzerland..........................................................................................................................................191 Turkey................................................................................................................................................. 195 Ukraine................................................................................................................................................198 United Kingdom.................................................................................................................................. 200 Generated 27 April 2021 ECO REPORT 03 Page 3 / 204 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY This ECO Report presents the most recent information available to the European Communications Office (ECO) on the licensing of the following frequency bands in CEPT countries: • 694-790 MHz • 790-862 MHz • 880-915 MHz / 925-960 MHz • 1427-1452 MHz / 1492-1518 MHz • 1452-1492 MHz • 1710-1785 MHz / 1805-1880 MHz • 1900-1980 MHz / 2010-2025 MHz / 2110-2170 MHz • 2300-2400 MHz • 2500-2690 MHz • 3400-3800 MHz • 24.25-27.50 GHz The information in this ECO Report is updated via the EFIS database by the CEPT administrations directly. Generated 27 April 2021 ECO REPORT 03 Page 4 / 204 INTRODUCTION This ECO Report presents the most recent information available to the European Communications Office (ECO) on the licensing of the following mobile frequency bands in CEPT countries: • 694-790 MHz • 790-862 MHz • 880-915 MHz / 925-960 MHz • 1427-1452 MHz and 1492-1518 MHz • 1452-1492 MHz • 1710-1785 MHz / 1805-1880 MHz • 1900-1980 MHz / 2010-2025 MHz / 2110-2170 MHz • 2300-2400 MHz • 2500-2690 MHz • 3400-3800 MHz • 24.25-27.50 GHz The frequency bands listed above are regarded in this ECO Report as 'mobile' since they are used for mobile systems such as GSM, UMTS, LTE or 5G NR in many CEPT countries. However, this report does not designate these bands to mobile systems, and it does not establish any priority of mobile systems over any other systems or applications which may be deployed in these bands. The list of bands included in the Report is updated regularly based on ECC harmonisation activities. In 2018 the 26 GHz band (24.25-27.5 GHz) was added to the list to allow for inclusion of information on 5G authorisations in this band according to ECC Decision (18)06. The information in this ECO Report was available for the first time in July 1998 on the ECO website (previously ERO website) as 'ERO information document on GSM Frequency Utilisation within Europe'. In that document information collected from administrations and operators concerning the frequency sub- bands licensed to GSM operators in the 900 (890-915
Recommended publications
  • Viaplay Included in Bahnhof's Top-Tier TV Package and Available As Add-On Subscription • Bahnhof to Distribute NENT Grou
    • Viaplay included in Bahnhof’s top-tier TV package and available as add-on subscription • Bahnhof to distribute NENT Group’s premium V channels for the first time • Partnership reflects NENT Group’s unique content offering and strategic focus on long-term distribution deals Nordic Entertainment Group (NENT Group), the Nordic region’s leading streaming company, has extended and expanded its distribution agreement with Swedish broadband and IPTV provider Bahnhof. NENT Group’s Viaplay streaming service will continue to be available to Bahnhof’s 350,000 customers in Sweden as an add-on subscription, and Viaplay’s TV & Movie package will now be included in Bahnhof’s top-tier TV offering, TV Stor. In addition, Bahnhof customers can add NENT Group’s premium V film and sports channels to their subscriptions for the first time, and the recently launched V Sport Extra channel will be included in the TV Stor package. NENT Group’s Swedish channels TV3, TV6, TV8 and TV10 will remain part of all Bahnhof’s TV packages. Kim Poder, NENT Group Chief Commercial Officer: “Our content offering is in a class of its own, and we are delighted to expand this relationship with Bahnhof, which is one of Sweden’s fastest growing operators. We have recently renewed our Swedish rights to the Premier League until 2028, we will be the home of FIS winter sports from 2021 and we continue to invest in Viaplay originals, the best Hollywood films and series, and high-quality kids content. We want Viaplay and our unique content to be as widely available as possible, and we are constantly exploring new ways to bring them to even more homes.” Jon Karlung, CEO, Bahnhof: “I am excited that we now have one of Sweden’s strongest entertainment offerings, thanks to our newly expanded agreement with NENT Group.” The partnership with Bahnhof reflects NENT Group’s strategic focus on long-term distribution deals that ensure the broad availability of its streaming services and TV channels across the Nordic region.
    [Show full text]
  • Albanian Mobile Companies 4G Service Strategies Application
    British Journal of Marketing Studies (BJMS) Vol. 7, Issue 7, pp.39-49, December 2019 Published by ECRTD- UK Print ISSN: 2053-4043(Print), Online ISSN: 2053-4051(Online) ALBANIAN MOBILE COMPANIES 4G SERVICE STRATEGIES APPLICATION Mario Gjoni State University of Tirana / PhD Candidate [email protected] ABSTRACT: Albanian mobile market is made of three big players. In this paper the strategies and application for the 4G services of all the operators is discussed and compared. Main point which is tested and discussed in this paper is the quality of service offered by all operators according to their respective clients relative to the application of the strategies pertaining to mobile internet services, and in particular 4G and 4G+ services. The data is organized and gathered according to the SERVQUAL model and his paper is only one piece of a bigger study made in Albanian Telecommunications’ Market. Primary data is analyzed using SPSS. The findings are true and representative of the Albanian market, according to the validity test and the findings. KEYWORDS: Albania, Telecommunication, Marketing Strategy, 4G Services, Service Quality, Servqual INTRODUCTION This study is an attempt to identify and analyze the applications of different marketing strategies of telecom service providers in product differentiation, pricing, distribution and sales promotion, or what is traditionally known as marketing mix in traditional marketing. The focus of this paper is mostly on the 4G services that the companies try to offer the best they can as compared to the competition. Strategies for the third and fourth generation mobile phone market or 4G are included in the study.
    [Show full text]
  • Mdex SMS Reachlist
    mdex SMS reachlist 01.12.2019 This information is given to the best of our knowledge. No responsibility is accepted for the accuracy of this information. This list is subject to change without notice. ISO 3166- Country Price- Region Country Carrier Network MNP MCC MNC 1 alpha-2 Code group Eastern Europe Abkhazia unknown unknown AB 7940 289 unknown 1 Eastern Europe Abkhazia Aquafon n.a. AB 7940 289 67 1 Eastern Europe Abkhazia JV A-Mobile Ltd. A-Mobile AB 7940 289 88 1 Middle East Afghanistan unknown unknown AF 93 412 unknown 1 Middle East Afghanistan AWCC AWCC AF 93 412 01 1 Middle East Afghanistan Roshan Roshan AF 93 412 20 1 Middle East Afghanistan MTN Afghanistan MTN Afghanistan AF 93 412 40 1 Middle East Afghanistan Etisalat Afghanistan Etisalat Afghanistan AF 93 412 50 1 Middle East Afghanistan Salaam Network Salaam Network AF 93 412 80 1 Eastern Europe Albania unknown unknown YES AL 355 276 unknown 1 Eastern Europe Albania AMC AMC YES AL 355 276 01 1 Eastern Europe Albania Vodafone Albania Vodafone Albania YES AL 355 276 02 1 Eastern Europe Albania Eagle Mobile Eagle Mobile YES AL 355 276 03 1 Eastern Europe Albania Albania Plus Communication PLUS YES AL 355 276 04 1 Africa Algeria unknown unknown DZ 213 603 unknown 1 Africa Algeria Mobilis Mobilis DZ 213 603 01 1 Africa Algeria Djezzy Djezzy DZ 213 603 02 1 Africa Algeria Wataniya Wataniya DZ 213 603 03 1 Oceania American Samoa unknown unknown AS 684 544 unknown 1 Europe Andorra unknown unknown AD 376 213 unknown 1 Europe Andorra Mobiland Mobiland AD 376 213 03 1 Africa Angola
    [Show full text]
  • Event Processing Applied to Streams of TV Channel Zaps and Sensor Middleware with Virtualization
    Event Processing Applied to Streams of TV Channel Zaps and Sensor Middleware with Virtualization Pal˚ Evensen April 4, 2013 2 Abstract The last decade has seen an exponential increase in mobile computing devices, as well as an increasing adoption of sensor technology in process industry, homes and public spaces. The increasing amount of information made avail- able by such devices has led to a class of pervasive systems that require little or no user input. Smart home systems is an example of such pervasive systems. A main obstacle for application developers dealing with sensor-based systems is heterogeneity of devices and protocols. A common obstacle for end-users is the manual configuration of networked devices. Our first research contribution is a middleware that overcomes these obsta- cles: The SENSEWRAP middleware addresses the problem of heterogeneity in a smart home setting through the virtualization of hardware and services. Fur- thermore, it provides automatic network configuration and service discovery. The usefulness of pervasive systems usually correlates with their ability to perform their functions in the background, without user involvement. Instead, these systems base their actions on available information relevant to their appli- cation, e.g., they are information-driven. For information-driven systems, like smart-home systems and other perva- sive systems to be able to decide on the correct action at the right time, it is vital that the correct information is made available to them in a timely manner. A primary asset of publish/subscribe interactions is the immediate distribution of new information available to interested parties, and as such, it is a well-suited model for building highly scalable and flexible systems that are able to cope with a dynamic environment.
    [Show full text]
  • ZONE COUNTRIES OPERATOR TADIG CODE Calls
    Calls made abroad SMS sent abroad Calls To Belgium SMS TADIG To zones SMS to SMS to SMS to ZONE COUNTRIES OPERATOR received Local and Europe received CODE 2,3 and 4 Belgium EUR ROW abroad (= zone1) abroad 3 AFGHANISTAN AFGHAN WIRELESS COMMUNICATION COMPANY 'AWCC' AFGAW 0,91 0,99 2,27 2,89 0,00 0,41 0,62 0,62 3 AFGHANISTAN AREEBA MTN AFGAR 0,91 0,99 2,27 2,89 0,00 0,41 0,62 0,62 3 AFGHANISTAN TDCA AFGTD 0,91 0,99 2,27 2,89 0,00 0,41 0,62 0,62 3 AFGHANISTAN ETISALAT AFGHANISTAN AFGEA 0,91 0,99 2,27 2,89 0,00 0,41 0,62 0,62 1 ALANDS ISLANDS (FINLAND) ALANDS MOBILTELEFON AB FINAM 0,08 0,29 0,29 2,07 0,00 0,09 0,09 0,54 2 ALBANIA AMC (ALBANIAN MOBILE COMMUNICATIONS) ALBAM 0,74 0,91 1,65 2,27 0,00 0,41 0,62 0,62 2 ALBANIA VODAFONE ALBVF 0,74 0,91 1,65 2,27 0,00 0,41 0,62 0,62 2 ALBANIA EAGLE MOBILE SH.A ALBEM 0,74 0,91 1,65 2,27 0,00 0,41 0,62 0,62 2 ALGERIA DJEZZY (ORASCOM) DZAOT 0,74 0,91 1,65 2,27 0,00 0,41 0,62 0,62 2 ALGERIA ATM (MOBILIS) (EX-PTT Algeria) DZAA1 0,74 0,91 1,65 2,27 0,00 0,41 0,62 0,62 2 ALGERIA WATANIYA TELECOM ALGERIE S.P.A.
    [Show full text]
  • UMTS: Alive and Well
    TABLE OF CONTENTS PREFACE…………………………………………………………………...……………………………… 5 1 INTRODUCTION......................................................................................................................... 10 2 PROGRESS OF RELEASE 99, RELEASE 5, RELEASE 6, RELEASE 7 UMTS-HSPA .......... 12 2.1 PROGRESS TIMELINE .................................................................................................................. 12 3 PROGRESS AND PLANS FOR RELEASE 8: EVOLVED EDGE, HSPA EVOLVED/HSPA+ AND LTE/EPC ............................................................................................................................ 19 4 THE GROWING DEMANDS FOR WIRELESS DATA APPLICATIONS ................................... 26 4.1 WIRELESS DATA TRENDS AND FORECASTS ................................................................................. 28 4.2 WIRELESS DATA REVENUE ......................................................................................................... 29 4.3 3G DEVICES............................................................................................................................... 31 4.4 3G APPLICATIONS ...................................................................................................................... 34 4.5 FEMTOCELLS ............................................................................................................................. 41 4.6 SUMMARY .................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • GGSN Release 4.0 Command Reference
    Cisco IOS Mobile Wireless Command Reference GGSN Release 4.0 Corporate Headquarters Cisco Systems, Inc. 170 West Tasman Drive San Jose, CA 95134-1706 USA http://www.cisco.com Tel: 408 526-4000 800 553-NETS (6387) Fax: 408 526-4100 THE SPECIFICATIONS AND INFORMATION REGARDING THE PRODUCTS IN THIS MANUAL ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. ALL STATEMENTS, INFORMATION, AND RECOMMENDATIONS IN THIS MANUAL ARE BELIEVED TO BE ACCURATE BUT ARE PRESENTED WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED. USERS MUST TAKE FULL RESPONSIBILITY FOR THEIR APPLICATION OF ANY PRODUCTS. THE SOFTWARE LICENSE AND LIMITED WARRANTY FOR THE ACCOMPANYING PRODUCT ARE SET FORTH IN THE INFORMATION PACKET THAT SHIPPED WITH THE PRODUCT AND ARE INCORPORATED HEREIN BY THIS REFERENCE. IF YOU ARE UNABLE TO LOCATE THE SOFTWARE LICENSE OR LIMITED WARRANTY, CONTACT YOUR CISCO REPRESENTATIVE FOR A COPY. The Cisco implementation of TCP header compression is an adaptation of a program developed by the University of California, Berkeley (UCB) as part of UCB’s public domain version of the UNIX operating system. All rights reserved. Copyright © 1981, Regents of the University of California. NOTWITHSTANDING ANY OTHER WARRANTY HEREIN, ALL DOCUMENT FILES AND SOFTWARE OF THESE SUPPLIERS ARE PROVIDED “AS IS” WITH ALL FAULTS. CISCO AND THE ABOVE-NAMED SUPPLIERS DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THOSE OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT OR ARISING FROM A COURSE OF DEALING, USAGE, OR TRADE PRACTICE. IN NO EVENT SHALL CISCO OR ITS SUPPLIERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY INDIRECT, SPECIAL, CONSEQUENTIAL, OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, LOST PROFITS OR LOSS OR DAMAGE TO DATA ARISING OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THIS MANUAL, EVEN IF CISCO OR ITS SUPPLIERS HAVE BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report 2012 Annual Report
    Annual Report 2012 Annual Report Annual Report www.AR2012.megafon.ru/en Chief Executive Officer I.V. Tavrin (signature) Chief Accountant L.N. Strelkina (signature) Annual Report 2012 CONTENTS MEGAFON MegaFon’s business model and key 2012 results 4 Finanсial and operational highlights for 2012 2012 marked a new 8 Our business page in MegaFon’s history STRATEGY Management’s overview of the results p. 14 and vision for growth 14 Letter of the Chairman of the Board LETTER 18 Letter of the CEO OF THE CHAIRMAN 22 Strategy OF THE BOARD 24 The Russian market in 2012 РERFORMANCE MegaFon’s operating and financial results 30 Review of operations 48 Finanсial review GOVERNANCE Free cash flow reached RUB 70.8 billion Corporate governance and risk management systems 52 Risk management p. 48 56 Corporate governance 69 Shareholder’s equity FINANCIAL REVIEW SUSTAINABILITY Our mission is Responsibility to employees to bring Russia and community together through 74 Sustainable development communication technology APPENDICES 82 Management responsibility statement 82 US GAAP Consolidated Financial Statements p. 74 128 Appendices SUSTAINABLE 160 Contacts DEVELOPMENT generated at BeQRious.com This Annual Report focuses principally on our operations in the Russian Federation. While we have operating subsidiaries in the For more information Republics of Tajikistan (TT mobile), Abkhazia (AQUafon-GSM) about MegaFon, see and South Ossetia (OSTELEKOM), they generate only 1% of the company website. our total consolidated revenues. Unless otherwise specifically The report is also indicated, this Annual Report provides consolidated financial and available online operational data www.AR2012.megafon.ru/en Approved Annual General Shareholders Meeting OJSC “MegaFon” Minutes dated 28.06.2013 Preliminarily Approved Board of Directors OJSC “MegaFon” Minutes № 192 (256) dated 14.05.2013 NATIONWIDE 4G AGREEMENT WITH NEW CAPEX LICENCE YOTA ON 4G NETWORK FRAMEWORK P.
    [Show full text]
  • A1 Telekom Austria AG
    IOOT™ M2M - iotBoat™ Cam - Reolink Go PT (Last updated - 10/05/2021) - v3.1.5 iooT™ PT Zones - Countries - Operators - Technologies Country Operator GSM GPRS UMTS LTE Austria (AUT) A1 Telekom Austria AG (AUTPT) Live Live Live Live Austria (AUT) Hutchison Drei Austria GmbH (AUTCA) Live Live Live Live Austria (AUT) T-Mobile Austria GmbH (AUTMM) Live Live Live Live Belgium (BEL) ORANGE Belgium nv/SA (BELMO) Live Live Live Live Belgium (BEL) Proximus PLC (BELTB) Live Live Live Live Belgium (BEL) Telenet (BELKO) Live Live Live Live Bulgaria (BGR) A1 Bulgaria EAD (BGR01) Live Live Live Live Bulgaria (BGR) Bulgarian TelecommunicaKons Company EAD (BGRVA) Live Live Live Live Bulgaria (BGR) Telenor Bulgaria EAD (BGRCM) Live Live Live Live CroaKa (HRV) Hrvatski Telekom d.d. (HRVCN) Live Live Live Live CroaKa (HRV) Tele2 d.o.o za telekomunikacijske usluge (HRVT2) Live Live Live Live CroaKa (HRV) VIPnet d.o.o. (HRVVI) Live Live Live Live Cyprus (CYP) Cyprus TelecommunicaKons Authority (CYPCT) Live Live Live Live Cyprus (CYP) MTN Cyprus Limited (CYPSC) Live Live Live Live Cyprus (CYP) PrimeTel PLC (CYPPT) Live Live Live Live Czech Republic (CZE) O2 Czech Republic a.s. (CZEET) Live Live Live Live Czech Republic (CZE) T-Mobile Czech Republic a.s. (CZERM) Live Live Live Live Czech Republic (CZE) Vodafone Czech Republic a.s. (CZECM) Live Live Live Live Denmark (DNK) HI3G Denmark ApS (DNKHU) Live Live Live Live Denmark (DNK) TDC A/S (DNKTD) Live Live Live Live Denmark (DNK) Telenor A/S (DNKDM) Live Live Live Live Denmark (DNK) Telia NaYjanster Norden AB
    [Show full text]
  • Amdocs 2017 Annual Report
    annual report 2017 fiscal 2017 a good year for Amdocs Board approved dividend increase for fifth consecutive year Amdocs is well positioned to enable our industry’s transition 2 2017 Annual Report 2017 Annual Report 3 letter to shareholders Dear Fellow Shareholders, Communications and media service providers are entering the first stage of a multi-year transition as they transform digitally to improve the customer experience. They are also moving to a virtualized, service- driven network environment in order to accelerate service agility and, in the case of many market leaders, continuing their journey to become “full-service” providers. Such full-service providers seek to furnish their customers with a rich portfolio of offerings including core communications; media, advertising and entertainment; enterprise enablement; internet of things (IoT) and digital lifestyle services. We believe that Amdocs is well positioned in all these spheres to enable this industry transition. Our unique and global perspective, gained through working with the world’s leading operators, enables us to help our customers seize the opportunities of this ever-changing landscape. Fiscal 2017 was a successful year for Amdocs in which we maintained our high win rate, having invested in what we believe are the right strategic engines to support the needs of the world’s largest global carriers as well as innovative operators in smaller markets. Furthermore, we delivered on our long-held reputation for execution, progressing a record number of significant transformation projects toward production. With an eye to the future, we continued to invest in innovation, partnered with cutting-edge companies and became early adopters of new tools and technologies such as DevOps and microservices (decomposing an application into different smaller services to make it easier to develop and test) to maintain our strong market position and extend our product leadership.
    [Show full text]
  • Financial Analysis Summary Update 2021
    FINANCIAL ANALYSIS SUMMARY UPDATE 2021 Prepared by Rizzo, Farrugia & Co (Stockbrokers) Ltd, in compliance with the Listing Policies issued by the Malta Financial Services Authority, dated 5 March 2013. 10 May 2021 TABLE OF CONTENTS IMPORTANT INFORMATION LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS PART A BUSINESS & MARKET OVERVIEW UPDATE PART B FINANCIAL ANALYSIS PART C LISTED SECURITIES PART D COMPARATIVES PART E GLOSSARY 1 | P a g e IMPORTANT INFORMATION PURPOSE OF THE DOCUMENT Cablenet Communication Systems plc (the “Company”, “Cablenet”, or “Issuer”) issued €40 million 4% bonds maturing in 2030 pursuant to a prospectus dated 21 July 2020 (the “Bond Issue”). In terms of the Listing Policies of the Listing Authority dated 5 March 2013, bond issues targeting the retail market with a minimum subscription level of less than €50,000 must include a Financial Analysis Summary (the “FAS”) which is to be updated on an annual basis. SOURCES OF INFORMATION The information that is presented has been collated from a number of sources, including the Company’s website (www.cablenet.com.cy), the audited financial statements for the years ended 31 December 2018, 2019 and 2020, and forecasts for financial year ending 31 December 2021. Forecasts that are included in this document have been prepared and approved for publication by the directors of the Company, who undertake full responsibility for the assumptions on which these forecasts are based. Wherever used, FYXXXX refers to financial year covering the period 1st January to 31st December. The financial information is being presented in thousands of Euro, unless otherwise stated, and has been rounded to the nearest thousand.
    [Show full text]
  • Global Pay TV Fragments
    Global pay TV fragments The top 503 pay TV operators will reach 853 million subscribers from the 1.02 billion global total by 2026. The top 50 operators accounted for 64% of the world’s pay TV subscribers by end-2020, with this proportion dropping to 62% by 2026. Pay TV subscribers by operator ranking (million) 1200 1000 143 165 38 45 800 74 80 102 102 600 224 215 400 200 423 412 0 2020 2026 Top 10 11-50 51-100 101-200 201+ Excluded from report The top 50 will lose 20 million subscribers over the next five years. However, operators beyond the top 100 will gain subscribers over the same period. Simon Murray, Principal Analyst at Digital TV Research, said: “Most industries consolidate as they mature. The pay TV sector is doing the opposite – fragmenting. Most of the subscriber growth will take place in developing countries where operators are not controlled by larger corporations.” By end-2020, 13 operators had more than 10 million pay TV subscribers. China and India will continue to dominate the top pay TV operator rankings, partly as their subscriber bases climb but also due to the US operators losing subscribers. Between 2020 and 2026, 307 of the 503 operators (61%) will gain subscribers, with 13 showing no change and 183 losing subscribers (36%). In 2020, 28 pay TV operators earned more than $1 billion in revenues, but this will drop to 24 operators by 2026. The Global Pay TV Operator Forecasts report covers 503 operators with 726 platforms [132 digital cable, 116 analog cable, 279 satellite, 142 IPTV and 57 DTT] across 135 countries.
    [Show full text]