UK: 'New golden age' of (digital) radio heralds review that could end FM
'New golden age' of (digital) radio heralds review that
could end FM
By Henry Bodkin 13 APRIL 2017 • 7:37PM
A surge in digital listeners has brought about a “new
golden age” of radio which could trigger the beginning of the end of FM
listening as early as this year.
Radio use in the UK is now at record levels, with 48
million adults listening to more than 1bn hours each week in the last three
months of 2016 year, according to industry monitor Rajar.
The renaissance has been fuelled by an increase in people
accessing radio digitally, through devices such as tablets and smartphones,
with the balance shifting so quickly that analysts predict digital listeners
will become the majority within a year.
The Government has said that once that milestone is
reached it will undertake a review which could result in the FM signal being
switched off.
Norway became the first country in the world to end FM
radio when it cut the signal in January,
“Even five years ago this situation was unthinkable,”
said Ford Ennals, chief executive of Digital Radio UK, the company overseeing
the nationwide digital switchover.
“People predicted radio would fall away — it’s
extraordinary when you think about the fragmentation of the media,” he told the
Financial Times.
During the last three months of 2016 170 new local and
national digital stations were launched, bringing the total number in the UK to
339.
Despite its current success, digital radio will have to
adapt to shifting listening habits as younger listeners replace older ones.
Data suggests that just over half of people between the
ages of 15 and 24 listen to live radio, compared with 88 per cent of people
over the age of 55.
BBC Radio 1, which is principally focused at a younger audience, lost 1 million listeners
last year.
Bob Shennen, director of Radio at the BBC, said: “Young
people are just not listening for as long,” but added the medium was “very good
at reaffirming its core values.”
The BBC currently enjoys a dominant share of the total
listening hours in the UK, accounting for 53 per cent, with Radio 2 alone
accounting for 17 per cent.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/04/13/new-golden-age-digital-radio-heralds-review-could-end-fm/
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