MUMBAI: The number of mobile phone users subscribing to streamed or broadcast TV services is expected to reach 65 million worldwide by the end of 2010. This data is contained in a new report from Juniper Research.
While streamed services are expected to account for the majority of customers (56 per cent) and revenues (51 per cent) by that time, the rollout of mobile broadcast TV services at the end of the decade should see broadcast subscriptions and revenues overtake streaming TV by 2012.
Revenues from mobile TV subscriptions will rise from $136 million in 2005 to $7.6 billion in 2010.
Broadcast TV services are expected to have been launched in 21 markets by 2010, with the largest number of users in Japan (8.68 million) and the US (7.97million). The most popular broadcast TV technology will be DVB-H, with 35 per cent of users worldwide.
However, according to report author Dr Windsor Holden, operators and broadcasters still face significant challenges before such services can be launched. Except in Korea, where services were launched in May, broadcast TV via the mobile is very much at the drawing board stage. We still have a number of different standards jockeying for position. When a standard is finally selected, you have to find spectrum.
" When you have spectrum, you then have to build a dedicated network. While all the technological issues are being resolved, you have to put together a viable content package. And at the present time, we have no clearly defined value-chain: Who will provide the services? The broadcasters? The operators? An aggregator? Quite clearly a number of options are possible, but these need to be finalised prior to the licensing process.
Dr Holden added that even when the commercial networks have become established, participants must be prepared to wait for several years before seeing any return on their initial investments.
"In the US, for example, Qualcomm and Crown Castle have envisaged rollout costs alone of $1.8 billion between them. It is unlikely that cumulative subscription revenues from the US will even reach the US$ 1 billion mark until four years of commercial service he says.