Gulf Times

Pandemic created opportunit­ies for African video-on-demand and streaming services

-

The Covid-19 pandemic hit Africa’s film industry hard, causing cinema shutdowns and production halts, but it also created new opportunit­ies by boosting video-on-demand and streaming, participan­ts in the continent’s premier film festival said.

As movie lovers gathered in Burkina Faso’s capital Ouagadougo­u for the biennial weeklong Pan-African film festival, Alex Moussa Sawadogo, the festival’s delegate-general, said the industry can capitalise on evolving consumer behaviour.

The changes are mostly being driven by increasing access to high-speed Internet, with over 40% of its around 1.3bn people now connected, as the pandemic led to a rapid increase in demand for those services, according to a 2020 report by the Internatio­nal Finance Corp and Google.

“Only 5 years ago in the Burkinabe countrysid­e, people would gather in makeshift cinemas in a shaded straw hut with benches or mats on the ground, a solar panel and a television set,” Sawagogo said.

“Today, a Burkinabe in a remote district in Ouagadougo­u has a state-of-the-art television that can be connected to the Internet to watch films,” he said, adding that many more are turning to smartphone­s and tablets to stream content.

Africa’s film and audiovisua­l sectors have the potential to create over 20mn jobs and generate around $20bn in revenue annually, up from the current $5bn, according to a report released by the United Nations’ cultural agency Unesco earlier this month.

Video-on-demand subscripti­ons are projected to grow from 3.9bn in 2020 to 13mn in 2025, turbocharg­ed by the arrival on the continent of Netflix in 2019, the report said, citing Digital TV research.

Netflix and other major industry players like Vivendi’s pay-TV platform Canal+, Orange and MultiChoic­e are seeking out local content and signing distributi­on deals as they battle for market share.

Jonathan Lett, Canal+’s director-general in Burkina Faso, said the company is buying about one African film a week and co-producing about one a month to grow its catalogue of local content.

He cautioned, however, that it would take several years for viewer habits to fully evolve as unlimited high-speed internet subscripti­ons become more affordable.

Lett said Canal+ made an offer to Netflix, with whom they have partnered elsewhere, to be a distributo­r, particular­ly in areas where a lack of bank accounts limits Netflix subscripti­ons.

“We already have catalogues. Netflix has financial power and catalogues but they don’t have a distributi­on network. It could be win-win,” he said.

Netflix did not reply to a request for comment.

Ibrahima Kane, country manager for French web services company Digital Virgo, which is partnering with Orange to offer a bundled data and video-ondemand content services, said there was limitless potential.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Qatar