359 bids received for FM stations; evaluation
on November 19
The private sector would be making an entry into
the FM radio broadcasting after a gap of close
to two years. On June 26 last year, a Delhi High Court directive had sent
almost all private broadcasters off the air.
The government has received 359 bids for 140 FM radio
stations to be set up in 40 cities for which bids closed on Thursday, November
4, 1999.
Prominent bidders include Reliance group, RPG group
and leading media houses including Indian Express group, Bennett Coleman
& Co Ltd, Zee Telefilms, Living Media group, Modi Entertainment, Sony
TV, Sun TV, Eenadu TV, Udaya TV, NDTV and United TV, according to information
and broadcasting ministry sources.
The bids will be opened on November 19. Ministry sources
said four companies - Zee Telefilms, Bennett Coleman & Co Ltd, New Media
group and Vertex Broadcasting - have bid for all the 40 cities.
The I&B ministry sold 451 application forms. Ministry
sources said that if the government is not in a position to start its own
education radio station, it may offer it to the private sector through a
bidding process. The government had earlier set apart one station in each
centre to be used for education. The I&B ministry expects that a total
of 76 frequencies can be made available under a two-part national plan.
All India Radio plans to sell a band from 104.4MHz
to 108MHz to private parties against license fees of Rs 1.25 crore, Rs 1
crore, Rs 75 lakh, Rs 50 lakh and Rs 20 lakh for the A, B, C and D categories,
respectively. The fees will be increased 15 per cent annually for the next
10 years.
The private sector would be making an entry into the
FM radio broadcasting after a gap of close to two years. On June 26 last
year, a Delhi High Court directive had sent almost all private broadcasters
off the air.
The private sector made a foray into FM broadcasting
following the opening up of the FM slots in the early 90s.
Ministry sources expect private FM stations to take
off only towards the end of next year or early 2001. It will take atleast
one year for the private players to kick off operations, after issue of
licenses, officials said.
Ministry officials said that the private sector can
avail of the services of AIRs engineering expertise in setting up FM
radio stations. Media analysts expect foreign broadcast engineering companies
to enter the field in the coming months.
FE
Report |