On
Digital
Media
Contracts
Three
Transponders
on
Astra
SES
ASTRA,
has
signed
a
capacity
agreement
with
South
African
pay-TV
operator
On
Digital
Media
(ODM)
for
three
transponders
on
its
ASTRA
4A
satellite,
and
has
also
contracted
to
provide
the
related
broadcasting
services
via
its
affiliate
ASTRA
Platform
Services.
ODM
will
use
the
capacity
on
ASTRA
4A
to
deliver
TopTV,
a
new
pay-TV
bouquet
that
will
be
offered
to
South
African
viewers
starting
in
May.
In
2007,
ODM
was
one
of
the
four
consortia
that
have
been
awarded
a
broadcasting
license
by
the
South
African
regulator
ICASA.
ODM
is
20
percent
owned
by
SES
ASTRA.
ASTRA
4A
carries
six
transponders
for
the
African
market
covering
Southern
Africa
from
Nigeria
to
Cape
Town.
The
contract
with
ODM
brings
the
total
capacity
contracted
on
this
satellite
to
five
transponders,
with
ETV
and
Globecast
previously
having
signed
one
transponder
each.
Ferdinand
Kayser,
President
and
CEO
of
SES
ASTRA
said:
“We
are
very
pleased
that
ODM
has
chosen
ASTRA
to
broadcast
its
new
and
exciting
channel
bouquet
to
the
South
African
market.
ASTRA
is
known
for
decades
for
its
excellence
in
Direct-to-Home
(DTH)
broadcasting
and
related
services.
We
are
therefore
ideally
positioned
to
support
the
launch
of
this
new
market
entrant
by
delivering
infrastructure
and
broadcast
related
services.
We
are
confident
that
the
new
pay-TV
offer
will
increase
choice
and
variety
in
the
South
African
market,
and
we
wish
ODM
success.”
Vino
Govender,
CEO
of
ODM,
said:
“With
a
staggered
launch
from
May
2010,
TopTV
has
recognised
the
need
for
value
through
choice
TV,
and
as a
result
will
offer
different
pay
TV
packages
which
have
been
created
to
meet
the
needs
of
subscribers
with
quality
programming
at
affordable
rates.
TopTV
will
offer
up
to
55
channels
at
prices
ranging
from
99
to
249
Rand
per
month
covering
a
broad
variety
of
genres
including
general
entertainment,
news,
sport,
movies
and
gospel,
to
name
a
few.
With
our
differentiated
multi-channel
subscription
TV
service,
we
will
significantly
expand
the
viewing
choices
for
a
larger
portion
of
the
population
in
South
Africa.”