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Digital Britain Will Incur £1 Billion Bill

Digital Britain Will Incur £1 Billion Bill

Freeview will today tell the Government that the cost to consumers of converting Britain to digital television is likely to be in the region of £1 billion, a third more than previously estimated.

Research commissioned by Freeview shows that the cost of digital terrestrial television more than doubles for nearly a third of those who buy Freeview set-top boxes. Of 1,000 viewers interviewed, 29% claimed they had to spend an additional £80 to £100 in order to have their television aerial upgraded once they bought their Freeview box.

This figure is in stark contrast with the 10% figure published in the Digital TV Project. The project, a partnership of Government departments, television equipment manufacturers and broadcasters, is due to be unveiled to the government ministers at the end of November.

“This 29% figure is significant because it implies that converting to digital is not going to be as straightforward or as cheap as the government thought,” claims a Freeview spokeswoman.

Allan Williams, senior policy adviser for the Consumers’ Association, commented: “Consumers benefit the most from digital TV but they also have to carry most of the cost.”

Last week, in its Global Digital Forecast report, Informa Media Group predicted that the UK will not be fully switched over to a digital signal until 2015 – five years after the government’s official target switch-off date of 2010. Informa says that consumer resistance from late adopters will be one of the factors adversely affecting digital penetration.

BBC: 020 8743 8000 www.freeview.co.uk

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