Skip to content

Breaking News

DRM General Assembly marks launch of updated DRM Handbook

Flightpath and Lemonada announce partnership

SwissRadioDay opens registration

CML Micro demonstrates dual-standard receiver platform at DRM General Assembly

Australia extends commercial radio tax suspension

Industry Insider — Lawo’s NAB Show Breakfast Session

The Podcast Show previews the creator economy and audience attention

Telos Alliance and friends to visit MPTS

DHD marks 30 years with AI tools and firmware updates at NAB Show

DRM highlights China digital radio progress at CCBN 2026

Saturday May 9, 2026
Partners
Newsletter
Contact us
About
RedTech RedTech
  • News & Business
  • Strategy & Views
  • Technology
  • Products
  • All stories
  • Contact
  • Advertise
Tieline Releases New Firmware for Gateway, Gateway 4
Trending
Tieline Releases New Firmware for Gateway, Gateway 4

Featured Strategy & Views

Malawi’s former broadcasters get a second chance

The move raises broader questions about costs, regulation and long-term viability

Angry Audio, VoIP, telephone, phone systems
Featured Products

Angry Audio hanging on the telephone

Turnkey VoIP phone system does not require hybrids

Featured

DHD to highlight audio production updates at MPTS London and Broadcast Asia

The company will demonstrate mixers, portable systems and software updates

Featured

Zeno Media powers streaming for WWHR-FM to expand digital reach

The deal will give the student station more control over its streaming and advertising

Featured News & Business

DRM General Assembly marks launch of updated DRM Handbook

The revised guide outlines deployment strategies and technical updates

Featured Strategy & Views

EU groups push for mandatory radio in cars

The proposal aims to safeguard universal access to radio

  • Contact
  • About RedTech
RedTech RedTech
  • News & Business
  • Strategy & Views
    • Strategy & Views
    • Videos
  • Technology
    • Tech Focus
  • Products
  • Events
    • RedTech Summit 2026
    • Previous RedTech Summits
      • RedTech Summit 2025
      • RedTech Summit 2024
      • RedTech Summit 2023
      • RedTech Summit 2022
    • RadioWeek 2026
      • RadioWeek 2025
      • RadioWeek 2024
      • RadioWeek 2023
    • Global Online Content Series 2024
    • Events
      • 2026 NAB Show
      • World Radio Day 2026
      • IBC2025
      • 2025 NAB Show
      • IBC2024
      • 2024 NAB Show
      • IBC2023
      • 2023 NAB Show
      • IBC2022
    • Events Calendar
  • Publications
  • News & Business
  • Strategy & Views
    • Strategy & Views
    • Videos
  • Technology
    • Tech Focus
  • Products
  • Events
    • RedTech Summit 2026
    • Previous RedTech Summits
      • RedTech Summit 2025
      • RedTech Summit 2024
      • RedTech Summit 2023
      • RedTech Summit 2022
    • RadioWeek 2026
      • RadioWeek 2025
      • RadioWeek 2024
      • RadioWeek 2023
    • Global Online Content Series 2024
    • Events
      • 2026 NAB Show
      • World Radio Day 2026
      • IBC2025
      • 2025 NAB Show
      • IBC2024
      • 2024 NAB Show
      • IBC2023
      • 2023 NAB Show
      • IBC2022
    • Events Calendar
  • Publications

Click Here to Subscribe to RedTech's Newsletter

RedTech RedTech
  • News & Business
  • Strategy & Views
    • Strategy & Views
    • Videos
  • Technology
    • Tech Focus
  • Products
  • Events
    • RedTech Summit 2026
    • Previous RedTech Summits
      • RedTech Summit 2025
      • RedTech Summit 2024
      • RedTech Summit 2023
      • RedTech Summit 2022
    • RadioWeek 2026
      • RadioWeek 2025
      • RadioWeek 2024
      • RadioWeek 2023
    • Global Online Content Series 2024
    • Events
      • 2026 NAB Show
      • World Radio Day 2026
      • IBC2025
      • 2025 NAB Show
      • IBC2024
      • 2024 NAB Show
      • IBC2023
      • 2023 NAB Show
      • IBC2022
    • Events Calendar
  • Publications

Click Here to Subscribe to RedTech's Newsletter

Featured Strategy & Views Technology

Radio at the crossroads, again

by Ruxandra Obreja June 15, 2022 8 min read
 Radio at the crossroads, again
Print Friendly, PDF & Email

These past two years have been turbulent with a pandemic, natural disasters, geopolitical threats and a raging war. Though radio has been at many crossroads during its one-hundred-year existence, the recent and profound changes in our lives and behavior have affected the course of broadcasting in a way we could not have envisaged a few years ago.

On the positive side, listeners validated radio during the scary and often lonely years of COVID-19. Its ubiquity, intimacy and simplicity continue to shine through. Recent Rajar figures show that 89% of adults in the United Kingdom tune in to live radio every week for an average of 20 hours. Most listen on a digitally enabled platform of some type. Smartphone listening continues to grow, though not astronomically. The popularity of radio is borne by figures elsewhere, too. For example, a reported 150 million Americans listen to at least some radio daily, much of that on AM, especially commuters seeking news, weather, and talk radio.

The increasing popularity of talk radio is also evident in the U.K. Spotify, Pandora and other streaming services have stolen some of the advantage FM had for pop music. But now radio has proven yet again to be that “friend in your ear,” with the recognizable voice and the warmth needed perhaps more than before the pandemic.

New focus on shortwave’s long reach

Also on the positive side, the long reach of shortwave transmissions is showing a bounce back. This is partly due to the tragic events in Ukraine, where bombardments and blackouts have made FM and the internet powerless. No wonder the BBC, Voice of America, Radio Vatican, and others with enough cash have upped the shortwave output to the war area, for now. The EBU recognized this in its May recommendation, stating, “Robustness and resilience come at some cost, but the likelihood and cost of unexpected events and their consequences are frequently underestimated. It often takes a crisis to show us how vulnerable we are… If there’s one lesson the recent past holds, then it is that to avoid the worst, it pays to prepare for it.”

Although analog radio remains strong, digital radio continues its progress through the three primary standards. Digital radio offers a better audio experience, and its extra benefits are now coming into focus. Digital Radio Mondiale certainly delivers marked better audio in AM, as analog AM is widely known to suffer from electromagnetic interference. DRM is more spectrally efficient than both analog AM and FM, allowing more stations, at higher quality, into the existing analog bandwidths with the difference that stations can broadcast up to three programs and one data channel on one frequency.

In the past 12 months, inquiries about adding DRM capabilities to new or existing AM, FM, shortwave  transmitters (only newer AM transmitters can upgrade to DRM) have increased by up to 50%, according to Ampegon, a shortwave transmitter manufacturer based in Switzerland.

Simon Keens, sales and business development manager at Ampegon, believes this “tech from the past” image associated with analog shortwave may have obscured the great advantages of modern shortwave, which is now clear and power-efficient. “Gone are the crackling sound and fading,” says Keens. “Broadcasters can broadcast crystal-clear FM quality stereo sound on shortwave, providing enormous benefits to displaced people or populations under censorship or other emergencies.”

Therefore, every time the DRM consortium hears that shortwave is “old hat” and that “even the Ukrainians and Russians need 21st technology such as VPN or Tor, not shortwave,” we stress that DRM digital radio is a 21st-century platform. It fits in a diverse media landscape with more players and more interests than ever before.

Terrestrial broadcasting under stress?

Radio is under pressure — other platforms are encroaching into its vast and revered territory. Economic woes and thinner wallets are also triggering quick and dramatic changes in the broadcasting industry. Acquisitions seem to come faster; witness Thomson’s acquiring venerable US transmitter manufacturer GatesAir.

The squeeze is also on public broadcasters, despite the high praise received during the pandemic. Following a freeze on the annual BBC license fee and its eventual abolition, the BBC recently announced yearly cuts of 200 million pounds (250 million dollars), accompanied by 1,000 job losses. Other changes include the disappearance of longwave broadcasts and certain programs and the amalgamation of TV channels. The BBC said the changes aim to create “a modern, digital-led and streamlined organization…a fresh new, global digital media organization which has never been seen before.”

The fight over the dashboard

Radio is at the crossroads because of the many pressures to simultaneously deliver audiences and ad revenue, remain relevant, be ubiquitous, yet local, and fit well into the wider and more competitive digital landscape. Nowhere is this more evident than in the fight over the dashboard. Cars are the big ‘audience catch-all.’ This has not escaped other mega digital providers of audio and video.

But the ever more popular electric cars are a new challenge for digital radio. The strong interference of the electric engines on the radio broadcasts, especially in analog AM, is a tough nut to crack. Vehicle and audio unit manufacturers are already working on the issue. 

On the bright side, another advantage for digital broadcasting is DRM in electric vehicles. For now, electric cars still take time to charge, and the necessary break becomes very useful to digital radio listening. So, digital radio will be a good, simple companion even in the vehicle of the future. As Tom King of Kintronic Labs (a DRM member) said recently, “Frankly, I think the dash is getting too complicated for people to drive and be able to function safely. It’s still got to be simple, guys! People don’t want to get in their car and spend 10 minutes trying to figure out what to do.”

“Digital,” “electric,” “green,” “talk,” and “change” remain the buzzwords. I would add two more. One is “difference”: What works in London and Geneva is different from what is needed in other parts of the world where digital FM and AM radio is vital; and not just for better audio. This includes other benefits DRM, as an open standard, can certainly offer, such as emergency warning, training and education at a distance.

The other keyword is “simplicity,” which digital radio has in abundance, doubled by its flexibility to adapt to a new world where progress is accelerating. If we can source the chipsets, of course…

The author is Chairman for Digital Radio Mondiale.

Tags: Dashboard Digital Radio Digital Radio Mondiale radio
Previous post
Next post

Ruxandra Obreja

contributor


Most Recent
Featured

Malawi’s former broadcasters get a second chance

May 8, 2026
Featured

Angry Audio hanging on the telephone

May 8, 2026
Featured

DHD to highlight audio production updates at MPTS London and

May 8, 2026
Latest Newsletters

7 May 2026 – Human Voice or AI Fake? | The Dashboard Fight | Unpredictable Programming

30 April 2026 – Innovations Reshaping Radio | Audio Without Boundaries | Cabsat Reschedules

22 April 2026 – Insights From the NAB Show | Media Convergence Scores | Cumulus Secures Approval

16 April 2026 – NAB Show Primer | K-pop Radio | Canadian Ad Decline

9 April 2026 – ARN Shifts Focus | Bauer Embraces Android | Belgium Plans Crisis Radio

6 April 2026 – RedTech Special Edition ‘The Innovators 2026’ Is Now Available

2 April 2026 – Radio’s Next Phase | New BBC Chief | Creating Tune-In

30 March 2026 – RedTech Magazine March/April is Here!

26 March 2026 – Celebrating Radio Luxembourg | RCS Names New Chief | Radiodays Riga Recap

19 March 2026 – Dual Standard Argument | Making Magic Between Music | Dashboard Dolby Atmos

12 March 2026 – 26 Radio Lessons | Japan Turns To Shortwave | RTL Belgium’s New Boss

5 March 2026 – Radio’s Competitive Advantage | Local News Rules | Radio Mandatory in Cars

25 Feb 2026 – East Africa Rising | Swedish Shake Up | Finnish Radio Strong

19 Feb 2026 – Young African Digital Voices | Bauer Drives Connected Journeys | Audio Campaign Effectiveness

12 Feb 2026 – AI Sound Design | World Radio Day Global Broadcast | New Code of Practice

5 Feb 2026 – Saudi Media Forum Explores Transformation | Free AI Tools | Broadcasters Reunite

1 Feb 2026 – RedTech Magazine Jan/Feb is here!

29 Jan 2026 – Reinventing Content Creation | Philippe Generali Retires | AI Energizes Cumulus

22 Jan 2026 – Rebuilding For Visual | RadioWeek Next Week | Trouble In Italy

15 Jan 2026 – Fishy Collaborative Podcasting | Italian FM Interference | Podcast Growing at Home

8 Jan 2026 – London Calling U.DAB | Audio Listening Habits | Sweden’s FM Race

30 Dec 2025 – The Quiet Engineering Behind Radio’s Next Phase

18 Dec 2025 – Radio 2 Winter Heat | Radio’s Human Advantage | Mediaset Muscles Up

11 Dec 2025 – Growing Nordic Radio | Lighting Up Christmas | A Commemorative Stamp

10 Dec 2025 – Meet The Solutioneers 2025/2026

4 Dec 2025 – Africa IP Shift | MPW Scholarships | LATAM Listener Trends

2 Dec 2025 – RedTech Magazine November/December 2025 Is Here!

27 Nov 2025 – Bright Color Radio | Win For Bauer | Radio Still On Receivers

20 Nov 2025 – Football-Mad Radio | 30 Under 30 Talent | Berlin Online Listening

13 Nov. 2025 – AI Radio News | Debating Radio’s Impact | Immersive Streaming Audio

6 Nov 2025 – Music An Asset |Bold Aussie Radio | DRM Drives India

30 Oct 2025 – Africa’s Collective Voice | AI As PD | Bauer Media Group realigns

23 Oct 2025 – Culture Powers Growth | 60 Years Of Innovation | Marconi Awards Winners

16 Oct 2025 – Is DAB+ The Answer? | Saothair Acquires GatesAir | Rethinking The Radio Console

9 Oct 2025 – Campus Radio Project | In The Club | AI In The Driver’s Seat

8 Oct 2025 – RedTech Magazine September/October 2025

2 Oct 2025 – BBC Mobile Tech | NPO Cuts Jobs | Awards Canned

25 Sept 2025 – AI Revisited | Rádio Rock Powers Up | RTL’s Six Of The Best

18 Sept 2025 – IBC2025 Insights | RedTech Award Winners | 2 Minutes Of Tech

11 Sept 2025 – Hearing Children’s Voices | Broadcast Giants Honored | Virtual Mixing

5 Sept 2025 – Read Now — Radio Futures: AI and Radio

4 Sept 2025 – IBC2025 All Change | Incentivizing Digital Transition | Video Takes The Lead

 

Related Stories for you

Zeno Media powers streaming for WWHR-FM to expand digital reach

by Daryl Ilbury May 7, 2026 4 min read

The deal will give the student station more control over its streaming and advertising

DRM General Assembly marks launch of updated DRM Handbook

by Daryl Ilbury May 7, 2026 4 min read

The revised guide outlines deployment strategies and technical updates

CML Micro demonstrates dual-standard receiver platform at DRM General Assembly

by Daryl Ilbury May 5, 2026 5 min read

The Jakarta showcase highlighted a working multi-standard solution

RedTech RedTech

RedTech International SAS
250 bis boulevard Saint-Germain
75007 Paris, France

contact@redtech.pro

Subscribe to our newsletter

About

About Us
Work With Us
Contact Us

Advertising

Advertise

Useful Links

Partners
Newsletter

more

Terms and Conditions
Privacy Policy

latest news

Featured

Malawi’s former broadcasters get a second chance

Angry Audio, VoIP, telephone, phone systems
Featured

Angry Audio hanging on the telephone

Featured

DHD to highlight audio production updates at

Featured

Zeno Media powers streaming for WWHR-FM to

Featured

DRM General Assembly marks launch of updated

Follow us:

Copyright RedTech International 2026. All Rights Reserved