Norway’s Hard Analog FM Cutoff Could Never Happen in US, Says NAB COO
Norway’s decision to become the first country to begin the “forced turn-off” of analog FM (see 1701090023) “is causing not just static, but outright anger,” said NAB Chief Operating Officer Christopher Ornelas in a Thursday blog post. “The angst stems from the fact that the shutdown could leave tens of thousands of people without access to some of their favorite free and local radio stations.” Norway’s example “has prompted a smattering of press reports suggesting that America may eventually follow suit,” said Ornelas. His “bottom line” response is that “no way will America go Norway’s route and ‘turn off’ FM radio,” he said. “It’s just not going to happen, in my lifetime or yours.” Norway uses the Eureka-147 digital audio broadcasting system, but “we in the U.S. chose a different path to digital radio,” he said. The HD Radio system in the U.S. “uses identical spectrum and the same channels for both analog and digital services,” he said. “Thus, there's no cost-saving advantage to shutting down analog FM services in America,” as there is in Norway, which requires “two separate swaths of spectrum for radio” to run analog and digital services with the same content, he said. “Turning off analog FM is apparently seen by the Norwegian parliament as a cost-saving efficiency -- even though actual radio listeners in Norway are quite unhappy about losing this service.”