In recent months, PHS has lost momentum in China due to dropping fees of
mobile phone services. As of October, China had 93.4 million PHS users, compared
to 85.3 million at the end of last year, according to the Ministry of
Information Industry (MII).
Now operators are shifting their investment
focus to the IPTV business as it is "a strategic choice for fixed-line carriers
(besides the mobile phone business)," Huang said.
China had 370 million
fixed-line telephone subscribers and 449 million mobile phone subscribers as of
October.
The booming broadband Internet business is giving a boost to the
IPTV market in China. By October China had 49.8 million broadband Internet
users.
Operators' increasing investments in IPTV is benefiting a number
of companies such as ZTE, UTStarcom, Huawei and Alcatel Shanghai Bell (ASB),
which have been developing IPTV technology.
ZTE, for instance, has won
contracts from operators to supply IPTV equipment and solutions in a number of
cities and provinces including Beijing, Yunnan and Shaanxi provinces.
Yet, regulatory uncertainties are
still thwarting rapid up-take of IPTV in China. Both broadcasting and telecoms
operators are vying for an upper hand in the IPTV market, which represents a
convergence of the broadcasting and telecoms industries.
Even regulators
are struggling to enter the IPTV market. For instance, local broadcasting
regulators in Quanzhou, a city in East China's Fujian Province, banned China Telecom from operating an IPTV
service in the city.
But China's broadcasting regulators are aggressively
promoting digital TV over cable lines in the country, which could eclipse the
growth of IPTV in the country.
Despite intense competition, broadcasting
and telecoms operators will find they need to work together to create a
"win-win" situation to better tap into the emerging market, Huang said.
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