logo
BBC to charge Americans for news as Britons ditch licence fee

BBC to charge Americans for news as Britons ditch licence fee

Telegraph5 hours ago

The BBC is to start charging US-based users for access to news and live TV amid a decline in Britons paying the licence fee.
The broadcaster unveiled details of the paywall on Thursday, which will see American households charged $8.99 (£6.55) a month for a 'premium service'. An annual subscription will be priced at $49.99.
The package will grant users unlimited access to news and feature articles, while a livestream of the BBC News channel will also be available.
Ad-free documentary series and films will be included in the subscription, which will be launched on Thursday.
It is the first time that users outside the UK will have to pay for the BBC's news coverage, although bosses said there were no plans to introduce a similar model outside the US.
The introduction of a paid-for subscription service comes as the BBC seeks alternative sources of revenue to counter a growing number of people not paying the licence fee.
The number of UK households paying the fee dropped by roughly 500,000 last year.
BBC executives are targeting the US as they believe it represents a major commercial opportunity for the broadcaster, largely owing to the country's lack of impartial news coverage.
American appeal
The BBC has become increasingly popular across the Atlantic in recent years.
In 2020, a Reuters survey found it to be more trusted by American audiences than large US domestic media brands such as CBS and The New York Times.
Its website alone reaches 60m Americans, which is almost half of its 139m global visitors.
However, the BBC's global expansion efforts have been hampered by the rise of streaming services such as Netflix.
This has been compounded by dwindling income from the licence fee, which fell by 30pc in real terms between 2010 and 2020.
Tim Davie, the BBC's director-general, has called for the licence fee, which costs £174.50 per year, to be raised to stem what he called a decade of 'grinding cuts'.
He said earlier this month: 'I do want universal funding and I want proper investment and not begrudging, grinding cuts to the BBC, which you've had in the last 10 years, which have just not helped.'
Americans who choose not to pay for the service will still be able to access a selection of news stories and will be able to listen to BBC radio stations and podcasts.
It comes ahead of talks over the renewal of the BBC's Royal Charter, which is likely to determine how the broadcaster is funded.
Lisa Nandy, the Culture Secretary, has previously said the licence fee was 'unenforceable' and ruled out funding the BBC through regular taxes, saying she would like to 'support a BBC that is empowered to continue to deliver a vital public service, funded in a sustainable way'.
Following the paywall's announcement, Rebecca Glashow, the chief executive of BBC Studios' global media and streaming, said: 'Over three years ago, we set out on a bold mission: to completely reimagine how we deliver the BBC's world-class news and factual content to consumers in the US.
'Over the next few months, as we test and learn more about audience needs and habits, additional long-form factual content will be added to the offer for paying users.
'This is a major milestone and just the beginning of an exciting new chapter.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

$2.5 quadrillion clearing giant DTCC explores stablecoin
$2.5 quadrillion clearing giant DTCC explores stablecoin

Coin Geek

time5 minutes ago

  • Coin Geek

$2.5 quadrillion clearing giant DTCC explores stablecoin

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC), one of the world's largest transaction processors, is exploring a stablecoin to keep up with rising blockchain adoption in finance. A New Jersey-based financial infrastructure company source told The Information that it has been weighing a U.S. dollar-backed stablecoin for faster and cheaper trade settlements. It also believes they could ease the movement of assets across the various markets it operates. In a separate statement to The Block, a spokesperson for the company confirmed the stablecoin venture, describing it as part of its mission 'to protect and advance the global financial markets.' '…we are monitoring policy developments in the U.S. Congress and regulatory agencies, and will continue to assess our options, including the potential of issuing a DTCC stablecoin, if needed, to support the industry's increasing adoption of blockchain technology for use in financial transactions,' the spokesperson said. DTCC is the world's largest clearing and settlement company, serving all major U.S. exchanges and broker-dealers. Together with all its subsidiaries, it processes over $2.5 quadrillion annually, making it one of the key cogs of the global financial plumbing. Just days before the reports, DTCC published a blog post noting that institutional stablecoins and tokenized money market funds are reshaping liquidity in financial markets. '…it is evident that stablecoins are here to stay and will impact not only payments but broader capital markets,' it said, further describing stablecoins as 'a critical component of the evolving capital markets landscape.' However, it acknowledged that stablecoins will only become part of the financial system if regulators implement enabling policies. It singled out the ongoing legal clarifications by U.S. lawmakers and the European Central Bank's (ECB) stablecoin frameworks as some key initiatives that will shape global regulations. It also hailed Bermuda's licensing of recently IPO'd stablecoin issuer Circle (NASDAQ: CRCL). Days before it confirmed its stablecoin plans, DTCC announced a new partnership with Fnality that will integrate the latter's on-chain settlements system into the clearinghouse's digital asset platform. Fnality is a startup backed by major financial players, including the DTCC, Goldman Sachs (NASDAQ: GS), Nasdaq, MUFG (NASDAQ: MBFJF), UBS (NASDAQ: UBS) and more. It provides an on-chain payment system for wholesale financial markets, replacing the slow and inefficient interbank settlement rails. Under the new partnership, the two will enable clients to automatically transfer assets in real time while also eliminating the need for fragmented liquidity accounts. DTCC joins a bevy of financial industry giants targeting stablecoins as the sector records parabolic growth. This week, American fintech giant Fiserv (NASDAQ: FI) launched FIUSD, its new stablecoin, which will be available to over 10,000 financial institutions and over five million merchants. FIUSD is built on stablecoin infrastructure from Paxos and Circle. Earlier this month, it was revealed that Walmart (NASDAQ: WMT) and Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) were exploring launching their own stablecoins. The two are the biggest U.S. retailers and, combined, account for over $1.1 trillion in annual revenue. Bermuda's government stablecoin push continues Elsewhere, the island territory of Bermuda continues to warm up to stablecoins. This time, the government has backed an event with a stablecoin airdrop for the attendees. During the Bermuda Digital Finance Forum, attendees who downloaded a digital wallet developed by Coinbase (NASDAQ: COIN) received $100 worth of USDC that they could use to pay for food and drinks at the event. 'We want Bermudians to be part of this growing industry,' Premier David Burt said in a follow-up statement. The government has been working toward making digital finance more accessible, and the event offered the attendees the opportunity to 'experience what the future of money looks like,' he added. Bermuda is a British Overseas Territory in the North Atlantic Ocean with 65,000 residents. Its $8 billion GDP relies almost fully on international businesses, mainly in finance, which set up operations on the island. One of these is Circle, the USDC issuer; after acquiring tokenization platform Hashnote earlier this year, Circle moved it to Bermuda to capitalize on the island's friendly licensing. 'Bermuda is a global gold standard in regulation,' Circle President Heath Tarbert stated as he revealed he would be moving Hashnote from the Cayman Islands. Hashnote operates one of the largest tokenized money market funds, with assets under management hitting $1 billion earlier this year. Watch | Centi: Bridging digital money and traditional banking title="YouTube video player" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share" referrerpolicy="strict-origin-when-cross-origin" allowfullscreen="">

Lithium industry bemoans 'paradox' of low prices, rising demand
Lithium industry bemoans 'paradox' of low prices, rising demand

Reuters

time7 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Lithium industry bemoans 'paradox' of low prices, rising demand

LAS VEGAS, June 26 (Reuters) - An ongoing slide in lithium prices even as demand for the battery metal continues to climb is a frustrating "paradox" not likely to be resolved before at least 2030, the world's largest producers told a major industry conference this week. Once a niche metal used primarily in greases, ceramics and pharmaceuticals, lithium's use in electric vehicles, large-scale battery storage and other electronic applications has grown rapidly, with demand up 24% last year and likely to grow 12% annually for the next decade, according to data from consultancy Fastmarkets. Oversupply from China, however, has dragged prices down more than 90% in the past two years, fueling layoffs, corporate buyouts and project delays across the globe. "We've got market pain, but on the other side is the strategic gain. That is the lithium paradox," Dale Henderson, CEO of Australian lithium miner Pilbara Minerals ( opens new tab, told the Fastmarkets Lithium and Battery Raw Materials Conference in Las Vegas. One long-time conference attendee described the mood at this year's conference using the stages of grief as a metaphor. Last year's conference reflected denial, with the sentiment in 2025 one of acceptance, he said. Despite the price drop, attendance at the conference - considered the world's largest annual gathering of lithium investors, executives and consumers - fell only 9% from last year to roughly 1,000, according to organizers. "It's quite hard to imagine a future where lithium doesn't play a central role in the global economy," said Paul Lusty, head of battery raw materials research at Fastmarkets. Chinese miners have stockpiled supply that likely will only come down later this decade and lessen the market imbalance, he added. Others have seen an even longer timeframe. Project Blue, another minerals consultancy, does not expect lithium demand to exceed supply until 2033 at the earliest. "Lithium has no chill mode. It really is more volatile than a lot of other markets out there," said Peter Hannah, head of pricing at Albemarle (ALB.N), opens new tab, the world's largest lithium producer, which has cut staff and delayed expansion projects in response to the price drop. Much of the conference side chatter focused on efforts to curb spending, with various lithium projects - especially direct lithium extraction (DLE) projects - touting efforts to lower costs. "The issues with lithium are which mines can produce the highest quality product at the lowest cost," said Ken Hoffman, a commodity strategist with mining investment bank Red Cloud Securities. EnergyX, a DLE developer backed by General Motors (GM.N), opens new tab, unveiled a study showing it could produce the metal in northern Chile with operating costs below $3,000 per metric ton. The estimates are preliminary, but underscore the industry's push to spend less. "Innovation is the solution to building a resilient battery supply chain," said Chris Doornbos, CEO of E3 Lithium (ETL.V), opens new tab, which is developing a DLE project in Alberta. Adding to the market tension, SQM ( opens new tab - the world's second-largest lithium producer - laid off 5% of its workforce this week. "We do have other factors impacting the behavior of the market participants than just pure economics," Andres Fontannaz, commercial vice president of SQM's international lithium division, told the conference, a reference to how electric vehicles have become a political target in some countries. The tension is even higher for lithium projects under construction and hoping prices rise by the time they open. "This is a really tough industry to be in," said Jon Evans, CEO of Lithium Americas ( opens new tab, which is building North America's largest lithium mine in Nevada. "It's periods of euphoria followed by periods of pain and suffering, which we're in now."

Musk calls Lebanese president as Starlink seeks license
Musk calls Lebanese president as Starlink seeks license

Reuters

time12 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Musk calls Lebanese president as Starlink seeks license

BEIRUT, June 26 (Reuters) - Billionaire businessman Elon Musk and Lebanese President Joseph Aoun spoke by phone to discuss making elements of Musk's sprawling business empire available in Lebanon, a statement from Aoun's office said on Thursday. The statement said Musk called Aoun and "expressed his interest in Lebanon and its telecommunications and internet sectors". Aoun invited Musk to visit Lebanon and said he was open to having Musk's companies present in the country, which ranks among the countries with the lowest internet speeds. The call came just weeks after Aoun and other top Lebanese officials met with Starlink's Global Director of Licensing and Development, Sam Turner, in Beirut for talks on providing satellite internet services in Lebanon. U.S. ambassador Lisa Johnson was pictured attending those meetings. The negotiations have prompted some pushback in Lebanon. Internet access in the country has so far been operated exclusively by state-owned companies and their affiliates, who are lobbying the government not to license Starlink. Starlink recently received licenses to operate in India and Lesotho.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store