Ethiopian Broadcasters
to Migrate to SES Satellite Creating Dedicated
Ethiopian TV Environment
July 09, 2019
Ethiopian private and
public broadcasters, and the local media market,
are poised for growth following two agreements
signed between SES and the Association of
Ethiopian Broadcasters (AEB), and the Ethiopian
Broadcasting Cooperation (EBC) that will result
in the creation of a dedicated Ethiopian TV
environment. In particular, the AEB agreement
will see the most popular Ethiopian TV channels
migrate to a new TV neighbourhood hosted by
SES’s NSS-12 satellite at 57 degrees East.
Ethiopia currently has more
than 4 million TV households that access
television service via satellite. The majority
of content is currently broadcast from an
orbital location that also supplies content to
Middle Eastern and North African countries,
mixing local and international content.
The migration agreement
with AEB will create a dedicated TV
neighbourhood for Ethiopians on SES’s East
Africa Digital TV platform on NSS-12 at 57
degrees East and will be launched in August
2019. The consolidation of Ethiopian content
into one prime TV neighbourhood under a new
orbital location means that the AEB members
comprising private broadcasters EBS, Fana
Broadcasting, Walta TV, Arts TV, Afrihealth,
OBS, LTV, Kana, JTV, DWTV, Asham TV, Ahadu TV,
Ministry of Education and Nahoo TV will be able
to easily expand their audience reach. Together,
these 14 members of the association control more
than 50% of the viewership of Ethiopia and will
be able to foster healthy advertising markets
that will strengthen the development of the
country’s free-to-air (FTA) market.
In a separate agreement
with SES, the public and regional channels
including ETV News, ETV Entertainment, ETV
Languages, OBN TV, Tigray TV, South TV and
Amhara TV led by the public service broadcaster
EBC will also be distributed via this
Ethiopian-dedicated TV neighbourhood. The
Ethiopian content via NSS-12 will be broadcast
mainly in high-definition (HD), introducing a
new level of viewing experience to Ethiopian
audiences.
Given that 16 million homes
in Ethiopia do not have TV service today, the
consolidation of broadcasting Ethiopian-only
content to the people offers strong potential
growth in the local media sector.
In addition to satellite
capacity and video services such as content
transportation and management, SES also will
provide on-the-ground services to ensure the
success of the new neighbourhood. SES’s local
team will train local installers to correctly
repoint the satellite dishes of each TV
household, making the migration possible.
“We are at a critical
juncture in Ethiopia. We want to harness the
momentum for change and create a truly Ethiopian
TV neighbourhood that will deliver local content
to viewers in high quality, and fuel growth in
the Ethiopian media sector,” said Amman
Fissehazion, Chairman of AEB. “We are pleased to
be working with SES and its local team toward
this goal as they provide the dedication and
experience needed to successfully implement such
an ambitious project.”
“We are excited for our
channels to be part of an Ethiopian-only TV
bouquet that is broadcast on SES’s East Africa
video platform on NSS-12 at 57 degrees East.
Over the last few years, SES has been working
closely with all the key stakeholders in the
Ethiopian media sector and building up their
local presence with the opening of SES East
Africa office in Addis Ababa. They have been
providing excellent 24/7 technical support, and
training locals how to install satellite dishes.
These activities will intensify in the months to
come, and can only benefit our economy and end
consumers,” said Belete Esubalew Gemberie,
Deputy CEO and Media Technology Cluster Head of
EBC.
“We are honoured to be
working with AEB and EBC on this endeavour,
which recognises our full commitment to our
customers,” said Ferdinand Kayser, CEO of SES
Video. “We are proud that the migration will
bring a completely new television experience to
Ethiopians and drive new levels of growth in the
Ethiopian media industry.”