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CSA Outlines Plans for DAB+ Acceleration France at WorldDAB General Assembly

A second key topic at the general assembly was Norway

PARIS � Addressing over 200 delegates at the WorldDAB General Assembly in Paris, Nicolas Curien, board member in charge of radio at the CSA, described the measures being put in place to accelerate the roll-out of DAB+ in new cities and highways across the country:

  • Licenses in Lyon and Strasbourg will be issued by the end of November 2017.
  • DAB+ services in the Hauts de France region will start in March or April next year.
  • The CSA also announced it is accelerating the schedule for local and regional deployment � with plans for two successive calls, each covering 15 large, densely populated areas. The first is scheduled for the first half of 2018 and the second for the first half of 2019.
  • The CSA is also investigating the possibility of a call for applications in 2018 for two national multiplexes, for which spectrum has already been set aside.

�I have two pieces of good news: the first is that the responses to the CSA�s public consultation have been numerous and extremely encouraging. The second is that there is no bad news,� Curien said in a press release from WorldDAB. �DAB+ technology will finally be able to take off significantly in mainland France by the end of 2020. The plan that I like to call �nodes and arcs� is on the way to becoming reality.�

A second key topic at the general assembly was Norway, which completes the switch-off of its national FM services next month. (Local FMs continue through until at least the end of 2021.) Delegates heard positive reports from the Norwegian regulator and public and private broadcasters. These messages were particularly relevant to Switzerland, which starts its own switch-off in 2020, and to other countries which are planning their future digital radio roadmaps.

Delegates also heard about the continuing progress of DAB in Europe and the growing number of trials taking place across Africa, the Middle East, Turkey and the Asia Pacific region.

In other presentations, WorldDAB again called for European legislation that would require all new radio receivers (consumer and automotive) to incorporate both analog and digital capability. This addresses a key concern of broadcasters over the speed at which they can build a digital audience, currently restricted by the sale of FM-only radios.

During the members-only session, a new steering board was elected by WorldDAB members and Patrick Hannon was re-elected as president for a further two years. Joan Warner from Commercial Radio Australia and Jacqueline Bierhorst from Digital Radio Netherlands were elected as vice presidents.

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