Digital TV Penetration Accelerates in SubSaharan Africa

London, UK, January 7, 2013

About  35.3% of TV homes (14.0 million)  in Sub-Saharan Africa  took digital  signals by end-2012, according to a new report from Digital TV Research. The  Digital TV Sub-Saharan Africa report forecasts that digital TV penetration will  rocket to 95.5% by 2018 – with household numbers quadrupling to 49.0 million.

Full digital transition will have been completed in Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda and  Zambia by end-2015.

Report author Simon Murray said: “Even we have been surprised by the pace of  change and progress in the region’s television market in the year since the last  edition of this report. These are exciting times for Sub-Saharan Africa.”

Two-thirds of the region’s TV households still received analog terrestrial signals  by end-2012, though this proportion will drop to 4.5% in 2018. Two-thirds of  television homes will take DTT (pay and free-to-air combined) in 2018, up from  only 11.7% at end-2012. Sub-Saharan Africa will have 33.8 million DTT homes  by 2018 – 25.7 million FTA and 8.0 million pay – up from 4.6 million in total at  end-2012.

The most  prominent DTT players are China-based StarTimes (active  in 10  countries with about 1.5 million Sub-Saharan Africa subs) and Multichoice’s  GOtv (operational in five countries).

South Africa’s  Multichoice also  owns DStv, its long-established pay DTH  platform that controls valuable exclusive rights deals (such as live English  Premier League soccer). Greater competition  (especially from cheaper DTT  players) led to  DStv lowering prices to some of its packages. However,  the  launch of sister service GOtv gives  Multichoice the ability to target all  demographics in the pay TV market.France’s CanalSat/Canal Plus Afrique is the other major  regional  pay DTH  player, although it does not compete too much with DStv as they separately  target countries with their respective languages.

However, DStv  faces more direct rivalry in East Africa from Kenya-based  Wananchi Group. Wananchi  is targeting the  15 million TV households  that it  forecasts for East Africa by 2015. With cable operations established in Kenya,  Wananchi launched its Zuku DTH platform in 10 East African countries in July  2011.

Only a small proportion of African homes can afford premium DTH packages.  There were 7.36 million pay DTH subscribers by end-2012, with the total  expected to rise to 11.27 million in 2018. Excluding South Africa, the number of  pay DTH households will double between 2012 and 2018 to 6 million.

Of the 9.26 million pay TV subscribers at end-2012, 79% were for pay DTH. The  pay total will double to 20.39 million by 2018. Pay TV penetration of television  households will grow from 23.3% in 2012 to 39.8% in 2018.

Sub-Saharan pay TV revenues will reach $4.62 billion in 2018, up from $2.88  billion in 2012. DTH accounted for nearly all of the 2012 total, though pay DTT will make inroads (contributing $744 million in 2018).

South Africa will remain the dominant pay TV revenue generator. However, its  share of the total will fall from 61% in 2012 to 47% in 2018. Excluding South  Africa, pay TV revenues will rocket from $1.12 billion in 2012 to $2.46 billion in  2018.

This 136-page report gives top-line forecasts for 42 countries as well as detailed  forecasts for nine territories. Furthermore there are regional summaries from  2008 to 2018 by platform, by household penetration, by pay TV subscribers and  by pay TV revenues.

For more information about this report, please contact: Simon Murray,  simon@digitaltvresearch.com, Tel: +44 20 8248 5051.