Skip to main content

The Ongoing Evolution of Pay-TV Service in Europe

European pay-TV added 10 million new subscriber homes last year and will reach 152 million by 2017, according to the latest market study by Rethink Research.

Telecom service providers took IPTV from 20 million to 25 million in the past year and will reach 43.3 million customers across Europe -- doubling in just 6 years.

The largest pay-TV players in Europe will still be News Corp with Sky, Liberty Global in cable and Vivendi with DTH and IPTV plays. Right behind them will be Deutsche Telekom,France Telecom and Iliad's Free.

These providers will grow both within IPTV and through the addition of DTH services to run alongside them.

European telcos are growing there TV subscribers faster than any other segment of European pay-TV and are set to become serious contenders -- holding their own in broadband and the quad play against cable companies.

There's many studies that highlight the higher broadband speeds of cable companies, but there's now new evidence that telcos are embracing VDSL to help reduce the gap in Europe.

Rethink says that France remains the toughest place for pay-TV competition in Europe and has the most individual contracts and market penetration -- with Denmark, the Netherlands and Belgium close behind.

Looking ahead, the pay-TV industry will evolve from a position where cable is dominant to where DTH satellite delivered pay-TV will overtake cable as Europe's favorite TV technology.

Meanwhile, cable will continue to focus on triple play service offerings and broadband wins. At the same time IPTV will grow to become 25 percent of the total pay-TV market, while pay DTT appears to be either flat or in a decline.

Popular posts from this blog

AI Investment Drives Semiconductor Demand

The global semiconductor industry is experiencing a historic acceleration driven by surging investment in artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure and computing power. According to the latest IDC worldwide market study, 2025 marks a defining year in which AI's pervasive impact reconfigures industry economics and propels record growth across the compute segment of the semiconductor market. Semiconductor Market Development IDC’s latest data reveals an insightful projection: The compute segment of the semiconductor market is on track to grow 36 percent in 2025, reaching $349 billion. This segment, which encompasses logic chips powering CPUs, GPUs, and AI accelerators, will sustain a robust 12 percent compound annual growth rate (CAGR) through 2030. These numbers underscore not only current momentum but a structural shift driven by large-scale adoption of AI workloads spanning cloud, edge, and on-premises deployment models. The scale of investment is unprecedented. As organizations ...