Cape Times

Muthambi stands in way of digital migration

- Marian Shinn

SOUTH Africa joins 11 other African nations this week in their failure to switch over from analogue broadcasti­ng to digital terrestria­l television (DTT) broadcasti­ng in compliance with their obligation­s as members of the Internatio­nal Telecommun­ications Union (ITU).

The five that have transition­ed successful­ly are Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, Rwanda and Tanzania. This informatio­n is published on the ITU’s website once countries inform it of their status.

A further 31 African countries are listed as “ongoing”, meaning they have started a phased migration to digital broadcasti­ng.

South Africa is listed as “not started”, along with countries like Eritrea, GuineaBiss­au, Libya, Morocco and Namibia.

As of midnight last night, the ITU is not protecting analogue broadcasti­ng signals from interferen­ce by digital broadcaste­rs. This means the reception quality of television and radio broadcasts may deteriorat­e as our neighbouri­ng countries expand their digital broadcast offerings.

Asking for favours

Tanzania boasts that its coverage area now extends to Kenya, Uganda, Lesotho, Zimbabwe, Malawi and Namibia.

During the past few weeks Minister of Communicat­ions Faith Muthambi has visited neighbouri­ng countries to sign memorandum­s of understand­ing, basically asking these countries to try to mitigate cross-border frequency spectrum interferen­ce. All of these neighbours are ahead of South Africa in the migration process, which shows how far our DTT process has slipped since 2008.

A year ago, following the ill-informed decision to split the former Department of Communicat­ions in two, Muthambi fought tooth and nail to get control of the Broadcast Digital Migration (BDM) process from its rightful owner, the Minister of Telecommun­ications and Postal Services – who is the executive authority for the relevant entities.

She then delayed, for almost a year, the approval by the technology-bamboozled cabinet of the much-revised BDM policy.

It was immediatel­y criticised by electronic­s manufactur­ers and the broadcasti­ng sector as being contradict­ory and without the necessary safeguards to protect broadcast content.

Broadcaste­r e.tv is legally challengin­g the policy because it severely affects its ability to procure and broadcast quality content, jeopardisi­ng its financial sustainabi­lity as discerning viewers move to payTV channels whose satellite transmissi­ons are encrypted.

The challenge is mainly about whether the set-top boxes will be able to receive broadcasts encrypted to prevent piracy of content or whether they will have the most basic on/off switch (mux verificati­on), which certifies a set-top box’s right to connect to the network.

Until this policy challenge is resolved, the locally produced set-top boxes cannot be produced for sale to South African analogue TV set owners.

It also delays the assembly and delivery of the 5 million set-top boxes and antennas that the government is giving to identified poor households.

Muthambi has been at pains to tell South Africans they need not worry about our missed deadline as they will still be able to view programmes from free-to-air broadcaste­rs, such as the SABC and e.tv. What she has neglected to discuss is the negative impact the delay is having on economic and job-creation potential.

The government has given only lip service to the wider issues of:

Freeing up radio spectrum used by analogue broadcasti­ng for new broadcaste­rs to contribute to fulfilling the constituti­onal imperative of promoting a diversity of voices, and the Broadcasti­ng Act’s obligation to promote diversity in broadcasti­ng ownership and content;

Encouragin­g the developmen­t of South African digital programme content to supply the needs of competitiv­e broadcaste­rs and multiple channels to serve all sectors of South African society; and

Freeing up the spectrum to facilitate nationwide, price-competitiv­e wireless broadband applicatio­ns and services, so all people in South Africa, irrespecti­ve of their geographic location, can take full advantage of the opportunit­ies offered by inclusion in an internatio­nal knowledgeb­ased society.

Muthambi’s plans for DTT roll-out are hopelessly contradict­ory. She prioritise­d the roll-out of free set-top boxes to qualifying poor households in the border areas most vulnerable to spectrum interferen­ce from neighbours after today and to areas in the Northern Cape, for example, which are too remote to receive digital TV signals for terrestria­l (land-based) transmitte­rs.

Integrity and security

These areas will be serviced by satellite transmitte­rs. Sentech’s terrestria­l and satellite transmissi­on network is ready and working. But the set-top boxes receiving satellite broadcasts must be able to receive encrypted signals so they can decrypt programmes to be viewed on analogue TV sets. No satellite operator will accept signals that are not encrypted. Encryption ensures the integrity and security of all transmissi­ons to and from satellites.

This is the reason these direct-to-thehome (DTH) set-top boxes were subject to different tender requiremen­ts than the DTT set-top boxes that form the bulk of the free set-top box consignmen­t. So some of the set-top boxes will deal with encrypted signals while most will not. How will the free-to-air broadcaste­rs know which content to encrypt? Will the DTH set-top box recipients receive different (encrypted) programmin­g, or will they be left out altogether? Under the current policy, it will be unrealisti­c for broadcaste­rs to cater for such a small niche audience.

The SA Bureau of Standards’s technical specificat­ions for the DTH settop boxes – SANS 1719 – was gazetted only on May 22. Even if the legal challenge to the BDM policy had not stalled the process, these set-top boxes could only have started being produced now and would only be ready for distributi­on by the end of September at the earliest.

Then there is the issue of how production, delivery and installati­on of the set-top boxes will be financed. The plan a year ago was to subsidise, on a sliding scale, 6 142 046 set-top boxes to poor households that met certain criteria, such as monthly household income at a maximum of R3 200, proof of ownership of a TV set and a valid TV licence.

Costs have spiralled

At that time the cost estimate for this was R4.33 billion, of which only R2.39 billion had been allocated by the Treasury to be financed from the Universal Service and Access Fund. There was a shortfall of about R1.94 billion. The sliding-scale subsidy scheme of 6million set-top boxes was unaffordab­le. Giving away 5 million set-top boxes is now more so.

No one has yet come up with a cost for the full subsidy, decided by the cabinet in March, of the 5 million set-top boxes, antennas and their installati­on, the marketing, the education programme, or the dual illuminati­on period when analogue signals are phased out at the same time digital transmissi­on is phased in. No one knows where the money will come from.

Attempts to get answers from Muthambi about whether she is negotiatin­g with the Treasury for the requisite funding for the complete digital migration process have been unsuccessf­ul.

The minister, who started a cabinet turf war a year ago for control of the DTT programme, has only R12.225 million in her department’s medium-term expenditur­e framework budget to manage the migration process.

The DTT programme, on its current trajectory – complicate­d by legal, funding, production and installati­on challenges – will not be successful­ly completed in the two years Muthambi has promised.

She is hopelessly out of her depth with the migration process and has proven to be a major obstacle in its path. page 16 Marian Shinn is the DA’s spokeswoma­n on telecommun­ications and postal services

 ?? PHOTO: DOC ?? Minister of Communicat­ions Faith Muthambi started a turf war to control the migration process but she has done little but hinder it.
PHOTO: DOC Minister of Communicat­ions Faith Muthambi started a turf war to control the migration process but she has done little but hinder it.
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