The digital terrestrial television system was launched in Thailand in 2014. it employs DVB-T2 as its digital encoding standard.

The Broadcast Commission (BC) under the National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission (NBTC) announced in the last quarter of 2013 that it plans to give DTTV license through open auction within December 2013. The prospectus has been priced at 1 million baht and many of the incumbent content owners providers as well as studios bought the prospectus. If all goes well, the auction will result in 4 categories of licenses: High Definition TV, Standard Definition TV, Children TV and Digital News TV. The number of provider who will survive the auction is still unknown.

Prior to the auction announcement, BC quietly granted a bottleneck "network" license to existing government incumbent which means that all the new DTTV providers have to send DTTV signal to these governmental MUX providers at the price fixed by the providers themselves. In response to claim of uncertainty and in order to lessen financial risk to potential bidders might face after the granting of license, BC came out to state that it encouraged the "potential" bidders to "negotiate" MUX price/charge before going into the bidding room.

List of channels on multiplexes

Multiplexes (MUX)

Digital television network operators in Thailand consists of Royal Thai Army (2 Multiplexes), MCOT, The Government Public Relations Department (PRD) and Thai Public Broadcasting Service (ThaiPBS)

PRDTV5 MUX2MCOTTPBSTV5 MUX5
Public Television NBT HD (2) Thai PBS HD (3) ALTV (4) Channel 5 HD (5) T Sports (7) TPTV (10) NBT Regional TV (11) MCOT HD (30) Channel 7 HD (35)
News TNN (16) JKN18 (18) Nation TV (22)
SD Workpoint TV(23) True4U (24) GMM 25 (25) Channel 8 (27) MONO29 (29)
HD One 31 (31) Thairath TV (32) Channel 3 HD (33) Amarin TV (34) PPTV (36)

See also

Notes

  1. subsidiaries of GMM Grammy
  2. Through subsidiaries Thai News Network and True4U Station

References


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