The EBU launched a new technical Recommendation at the Digital Radio
Summit today, in Geneva, confident that it will bring added impetus to
the rollout of digital radio services across Europe. Recommendation R
138, representing the first agreement among EBU Members on digital radio
distribution, was approved by the EBU Technical Committee last week.
R 138 advocates careful consideration of the needs of all radio
services in any country planning to digitize radio, including future
service expansion, available spectrum and the cost effectiveness of
different standards for different services. It is fully aligned with the
EBU’s Euro-Chip campaign, which is pushing for all new devices to be
capable of receiving both analogue and digital radio services and
switching seamlessly between them.
The key points of the new Recommendation are that:
- there should be adequate national planning, in order to provide digital solutions for all radio services;
- there should be immediate deployment using DAB+, which uses more advanced audio coding than the original DAB standard;
- where DAB coverage isn’t possible the Digital Radio Mondiale (DRM) system should be used;
- enhanced features such as text, images and programme guides should accompany digitization;
- hybrid services taking advantage of additional internet-delivered content should be deployed, for example using the RadioDNS system;
- added momentum could be given to deployment if it were possible to agree on harmonization around a future analogue switch-off date for radio in Europe.
At the Digital Radio Summit the recommendation was presented by Javier
Sánchez Perez (pictured above), chair of the EBU’s Strategic Programme
on Digital Radio Platforms. He stressed that “terrestrial broadcast
delivery is the only free-to-air and cost-effective method for truly
mobile reception, particularly in cars”.
(Source: European Broadcasting Union)
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