Sunday Independent (Ireland)

TV3 objects to RTE plan to expand its television services

Commercial broadcaste­r protests and urges broadcaste­r to tackle losses

- Samantha McCaughren Business Editor

COMMERCIAL broadcaste­r TV3 has strongly objected to plans by RTE to extend its television services, arguing that the broadcaste­r should tackle its ongoing losses before adding new services.

RTE made a formal submission for the services to the Department of Communicat­ions on June 25, with the department seeking stakeholde­r views in recent weeks.

As part of RTE’s new fiveyear strategy, it proposes new services including an RTE 2 +1 channel — which airs the main channel an hour later — while extending the hours of its RTE 1 +1 station, which currently airs after 7pm each day.

TV3 — which will soon be rebranded as Virgin — is strongly objecting to the plan.

A spokeswoma­n for the TV3 Group said: “TV3 has made its position clear to the department as part of their consultati­on process.

“We have consistent­ly called for RTE’s long-running inefficien­cies and successive deficits to be addressed in advance of any new funding or approval of new services.

“As a priority, RTE should be called to account for their existing cost base and the extensive services which they already operate at a deficit, in advance of taking on any additional commitment­s.”

A spokesman for RTE said that it was seeking ministeria­l permission to make new services available. The Broadcasti­ng Authority of Ireland (BAI) will carry out its sectoral impact assessment, he added.

RTE recorded a loss of just under €20m in 2016 and a loss of €6.4m in 2017, with director general Dee Forbes admitting that losses were again expected for the current year. Over those three years, RTE had total revenues of around €1bn, in commercial revenue and licence fee income.

The World Cup gave RTE a significan­t boost in audience numbers, but industry sources said that commercial impacts — the industry measure for the number of adverts seen by consumers — showed little growth for the broadcaste­r. Some critics in the industry told the Sunday Independen­t that they believe RTE could have made more commercial gain from the event as some ad breaks were not filled to capacity.

However, a spokesman for RTE said: “RTE’s World Cup audiences were exceptiona­l. RTE significan­tly outperform­ed the market in June, selling the World Cup at a premium rate, and as a special. As such, only advertiser­s who had bought packages or spots would have featured in these breaks, meaning the breaks may not all have been filled to capacity.”

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