When is the last time you heard a shortwave radio transmission? And
why should you put up with possible crackly audio and some interference
when we have now internet, satellites, FM and all forms of digital
radio?
This holds true if you are in London, Boston, Paris or Toronto. But
what if you are on an island in Indonesia, or find yourself in west
China, in Kashmir or in Brazilian Amazonia? Because, whether we like it
or not, there are several remote places in this vast world, many of
which still depend on shortwave broadcasting.
In the past (think the Cold War) a lot of people were able to obtain
free information from the international shortwave program. Many
international broadcasters were running expensive, energy-guzzling
transmitters for this frequency band “without borders” that ranges from
1.7–30 MHz (176.3–10.0 m), from the high end of the medium frequency
band just above the medium wave AM broadcast band, to the end of the HF
band.
Shortwave is just short of a miracle, actually. When it is beamed at
an angle, it hits the ionosphere. A mirror around the Earth and then it
falls like a ball at great distances, beyond the horizon. Thus these
transmissions reach listeners over large areas, continents and beyond.
Two or three high-power transmitters can potentially cover the entire
world.
Shortwave is used not just by international radio stations or radio
amateurs but is also essential for aviation, marine, diplomatic and
emergency purposes. Shortwave signals are not restricted or controlled
by the receiving countries and, as frequencies change in winter and
summer, they need to be coordinated internationally.
This is the task of the High Frequency Co-Ordination Conference (HFCC),
a non-governmental, non-profit association, and a sector member of the
International Telecommunication Union (ITU). This group meets twice a
year to produce a coordinated schedule for a summer and winter season,
ironing out any interference issues among countries or broadcasters. At
their recent meeting last month, they also discussed — once again — the
future of shortwave.
Nobody can deny that shortwave goes beyond geographical, cultural,
religious, political barriers, is free and can be consumed anonymously,
which few platforms can claim nowadays. About 20 years ago, the BBC
decided to cut its shortwave transmissions to countries such as the
United States and other developed parts of the world, since these
territories, or rather “markets” were served by FM and the internet etc.
Other important international broadcasters, including Deutsche Welle,
Radio Australia and Radio Exterior de Espana soon copied this model..
But the BBC kept shortwave for its large audiences in Africa and part
of Asia. At the moment the major shortwave broadcasters are BBC, Voice
of America, All India Radio, China Radio International, Radio Japan,
Radio Romania, KBS Korea and Voice of Turkey and many more.
Twenty years after the first big blow to shortwave, this frequency
band and its potential is being revisited. After all, not all the
listeners in the world have broadband, smart phones, data plans,
connected cars or enough disposable income. And analog radio in general
continues to be resilient: a third of households in the United Kingdom
don’t have a digital radio (DAB penetration has reached 64 percent).
That is 25 years after the first DAB broadcasts started in London in
1993), and almost 20 years after the commercial players join in.
Shortwave has been put on the agenda again as some of the old
transmitters needed to be replaced or upgraded. Meanwhile it has become
digital and this means more efficient transmitters and significant
energy savings of up to 80 percent compared with the old analog. No
wonder most of the analog shortwave transmitters sold today are
DRM-capable or ready.
In 2019 the BBC is still on shortwave and has large audiences in
countries like Nigeria, having recently introduced new shortwave
transmissions in additional languages. In Australia there was recently a
wide consultation on the possible reintroduction of shortwave for the
many Pacific islands depending on the services of Australian
broadcasters, which had rushed to close down good shortwave facilities
in the pursuit of internet and local digital.
Radio Exterior Espana has doubled its transmissions since October,
adding other languages than just Spanish to its schedule. Radio Moscow,
the blunt propaganda tool of the Cold War, has been transformed into the
sleek Radio Sputnik.
And Radio China has quietly upgraded some of its many shortwave
transmitters for domestic use and is now covering practically the whole
country with digital (DRM) shortwave signals.
[Read: China Makes Its DRM Move]
Digital Radio Mondiale was originally invented to offer medium (AM)
and large coverage (HF) and the advantages of the good audio quality and
extra multimedia services that can take shortwave into the 21st century. Maybe DRM was ahead of its time. The phasing in of digital broadcasts internationally was not in
tandem with the production and sale of receivers, which remains a
regional and national business. Since its birth DRM has proven that it
is a suitable option for shortwave offering an good digital quality of
audio and even short live video at great distance without fading and
crackly sound.
Now, at last, there are DRM receivers capable of receiving shortwave,
there are broadcasts and interested broadcasters. Quietly and surely
shortwave is being re-examined and appreciated for the quality of
broadcasts and its potential as a “crisis radio” too. It can become
crucial in emergencies when local and regional radio stations, satellite
and internet may be off the air due to damage. Broadband is getting
cheaper but is limited, 5G will come but not just yet, digital shortwave
is here.
The golden age of analog shortwave broadcasting is probably over.
However the band has an important role and great potential. It needs to
be appreciated and examined with an open mind as there now seems to
exist a true alignment of national interests, technical possibilities
and receiver availability, which could give shortwave a new lease on
life as a viable and unique platform.
F.RWorld
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