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BEIJING, March 27 -- Twenty years ago, a
black-and-white television receiving grainy images was enough to make any rural
Chinese home the centre of an evening's entertainment in a land where TV was
rare and channels even rarer.
Today that is nothing more than a memory, with a
feast of television programmes available to even the remotest islands and
valleys.
"In the past I only used to get one or two channels
and the image was often blurry, but now I can get more than 40 channels and the
picture is so clear and stable," said Si Zhibin, a villager in Yingshan County,
Sichuan Province in Southwest China.
The 658 villages in the mountainous county had just
20,000 TV viewers before 2000.
With such limited access to programmes, many rural
residents had little idea what was going on outside their community.
All that has changed, with every village in the
county now enjoying access to cable TV.
Si, whose village was hooked up to cable TV at the
end of last year, said that watching news and drama programmes is now an
essential part of his daily life. "It feels great," he said.
Si's experience epitomizes the development of TV
across the nation. In 1998, the central government launched the Cuncuntong
Project, which aims to give all villages access to radio and TV. At the time, it
was estimated about 148 million people in 680,000 villages were not covered by
radio and TV signals.
Both the central government and local authorities had
ploughed 3.44 billion yuan (US$428 million) into the project by the end of last
year, according to the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television
(SARFT). This huge investment improved the TV broadcasting coverage rate to 95.8
per cent from 87 per cent in 1997.
"The goal of radio and TV services is to meet
people's increasing cultural demands," said SARFT spokesman Zhu Hong.
He said the government would continue to invest to
improve news, children's, rural and ethnic minorities' programming, while also
developing digital TV and making efforts to ensure that radio and TV signals
cover the entire country.
SARFT Vice-Minister Zhang Haitao recently confirmed
that the long-awaited terrestrial digital TV broadcasting standard is due to be
released this year, which will promote the digitalization of TV in China.
He said a draft of the digital TV terrestrial
broadcasting standard had been submitted to the National Radio, Film and
Television Standardization Commission. It will then go to the Standardization
Administration of China to become a national standard. He added that China will
also draft standards on mobile telephony, Internet Protocol TV (IPTV) and
satellite broadcasting.
Digital TV can be received from satellite, cable and
terrestrial broadcasts. But the latter takes the lion's share when it comes to
Chinese TV viewers, making the terrestrial standard the most important one for
the nation. Therefore, China has decided to develop its own terrestrial TV
standard, based on the European standard but tailored to meet local
requirements.
The number of households capable of receiving digital
TV rose from one million in 2004 to 4.13 million in 2005, according to SARFT.
"The experience of many other countries indicated
that citizens' cultural and entertainment spending rises sharply when per capita
GDP surpasses US $1,000."said Pan Li, a professor at the Communication
University of China.
China's per capita GDP exceeded US $1,000 in 2003 and
reached US $1,269 in 2004. Pan remarked that this situation offers massive
potential in terms of the development of TV services.
Ensuring that all citizens can benefit from the rapid
development of TV services has become a major issue for the government.
One of the major tasks outlined in the 11th Five-Year
Plan (2006-10), which was approved earlier this month by the annual session of
the National People's Congress, is to ensure better provision of public services
such as broadcasting and telecommunications.
SARFT Vice-Minister Zhang Haitao said the government
was launching a new round of the Cuncuntong Project this year to make sure TV
broadcasts are available across the entire country.
"This is the most important mission for our
broadcasting business and we should all put it on the top of our
agenda."insisted Zhang.
He said that the goal for the next five years is to
provide broadcasting to all villages that have more than 20 households and
access to electricity. Terrestrial transmission stations in towns and counties
will also receive subsidies to improve their equipment and maintenance.
About 42 million people in more than 300,000 villages
are expected to benefit from the programme.
Zhang said the National Development and Reform
Commission, the Ministry of Finance, and SARFT have held a working conference on
financing the project. Although the amount of the investment has yet to be
decided, he said tens of billions of yuan would be needed.
(Source: China Daily) |