Welsh TV producers trade body, TAC, has published its submission to Ofcom’s further consultation on the Channel 4 licence.
Ofcom originally consulted on Channel 4’s 10-year licence late last year and has now issued a second consultation on the idea of raising Channel 4’s Made out of England (MoE) quota, from 9% to 12% by 2030.
TAC’s response argues that Ofcom’s proposed raising of Channel 4’s MoE requirement doesn’t go far enough, that it is too small a rise and too long a timescale, that such a small rise will be countered by Ofcom allowing Channel 4 to direct fewer resources to its linear channel and that Channel 4 should therefore be required to raise its MoE quota to 12% initially by 2029 and then 16% by 2030
TAC’s submission argues that Channel 4 should separately demonstrate its focus on each nation, “especially as audiences in Wales are less satisfied with it than in any other nation.” TAC also argues that w”hile Ofcom and Channel 4 claim that there is not the capacity in nations, Wales alone has around 50 companies active at any time, working with S4C, BBC, ITC, Channel 4, C5 and also international TV platforms.”
TAC is also asking that Channel 4 should hold at last two in-person commissioning meetings with the sector in Wales per year, one each in North and South Wales, and that it should also liaise every year with TAC regarding its strategy for commissioning in Wales.
TAC Chair Dyfrig Davies said: “While Ofcom has made a small step towards increasing Channel 4’s requirements to producers in the UK nations, this will not we believe make a tangible difference. Ofcom instead needs to introduce a suite of measures, including individual nations quotas, a mandatory 50% quota for out of London and a 16% MoE quota, to make a real difference and ensure Channel 4 is commissioning from a wide diversity of producers over the next ten years. To help with this it also needs to engage in a systemised manner with TAC and the Welsh sector on commissioning strategy”.
Staff Reporter
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