Brazil Wants Digital TV That Will Cost Zip to the Consumer

Brazil’s Minister of Communications, Hélio Costa, will soon travel abroad to check on the chances for technology transfer, which will make it easier to decide on the country’s digital TV format.

According to the minister, there is interest by some countries in installing factories in Brazil, which would reduce the cost of new technology. Brazil is specifically interested in semi-conductor industries, said Costa.

"In Brazil, 93% of the TV sets receive open TV broadcasting. What we want is a system that is robust enough to reach that 93%," explained the minister. "What Brazil really wants is a format that will have zero cost for the Brazilian consumer."

Among the various countries Costa will visit are Japan and Korea.

The announcement of Brazil’s choice for digital should have occurred March 10, but the committee studying the issue, which consists of nine ministers, asked for more time to make a decision.

Theoretically Brazil has three choices: it can select the Japanese format (ISDB), which is what broadcasters want, because it has good high definition, interactivity and mobile reception, but is not widely used outside Japan,

A second choice is the European format (DVB), which also has good high definition with more levels of interactivity and is used in 78 countries.

The third option would be the American format (ATSC), which has good high definition and interactivity, but no mobile reception,  Canada, South Korea and Mexico say they will use it.

There is, at least on paper, a fourth choice for Brazil: a kind of hybrid digital TV standard, which would mean adapting a foreign format but including technological advances developed by Brazilians in the area which are significant and known as the Brazilian Digital TV System (SBTVD).

There is no lack of opinions on which format is best. Everybody seems to have one. Recently University of Brasí­lia professor of Journalism, Murilo César Ramos, said he favors the European format because it offers more channels, more programs and more interactivity.

And the former secretary of Telecommunications at the Ministry of Communications, Mauro Oliveira, says he favors the hybrid format. "I don’t think we should be forced to pick "A" or "B" or "C" – Japanese, European or American. Brazilian scientists have done a lot of work on this and should not be left out in the cold," he declared.

The Ministry of Communications estimates the digital TV market in Brazil will generate US$ 10 billion in business over the next decade. And there is a strong desire to make a quick decision because the Brazilian government would really like to test the new format with broadcast images from this year’s World Soccer Cup which takes place this summer in Germany.

ABr

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil’s Justice Minister Resigns with Italian Guerrilla Case Unsolved

Tarso Genro just resigned as Brazil’s minister of Justice to run for governor of ...

Brazil to Use World Cup as Window for Its Agribusiness

The International Relations Office of Agribusiness of Brazil’s Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock and Supply, ...

US Firm Sells Amazon Trees by the Unit, But You Cannot Touch

RainforestForever.org, a U.S. based company, has launched a program, that according to the firm, ...

Biological Diversity Convention Makes Brazil an Ecological World Leader

Monday, March 20, in a press conference, the executive secretary of the Convention on ...

In the Americas No Leader Is More Popular than Brazil’s Lula

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva with 70% approval is the most popular ...

Brazil to Be Become Bi-Oceanic in November with Road from Atlantic to Pacific

The presidents of Brazil, Chile and Bolivia will be inaugurating next November a Mercosur ...

Day Care Center in Bahia, Brazil

In 3 years, Brazil Has Denied 1.5 million Children the Right to Life

Together with the other UN member-nations, Brazil committed itself to fulfill eight Millennium Development ...

Foreign Investors in Brazil’s Stock Market Triple

The Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE) reports that this year there has ...

The Stars of Brazil’s 2008 Auto Show: 100% Nationally Designed Cars

Several multinationals in the auto industry have elected Brazil, for some time now, as ...

Sí£o Paulo, Brazil, in Pastel, Through Loving Italian Eyes

A just-released book by late Italian designer Vincenzo Scarpellini shows pictures of the city, ...