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Home Authors Corner

Time to Break the 12-Minute Noose: Why India’s Broadcasters Need Courage, Not Comfort, from Policymakers

In this article, GV Krishnamurthy - GVK, Principal, AiNxtGen argues that India’s TV crisis is structural, not about ad minutes—caused by unequal regulation versus OTT—forcing broadcasters to exit linear TV and pivot to digital-first strategies.

by Guest Column
January 5, 2026
in Authors Corner
Reading Time: 5 mins read
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Time to Break the 12-Minute Noose: Why India’s Broadcasters Need Courage, Not Comfort, from Policymakers
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The Crisis Moves Beyond Debate Into Corporate Strategy

In December 2025, the Indian TV industry’s crisis stopped being theoretical and became visible in boardroom decisions, license surrenders, and workforce cuts. Broadcasters were no longer arguing for a few extra minutes of inventory, they were openly signalling that the underlying economics of linear TV had broken, even as digital video thrived under a far looser regime. When major networks surrender TV licenses in the same month TRAI reaffirms the 12-minute cap, the message is unmistakable: this is not about 3 more minutes of ads. It is about a broken business model operating under unequal rules.

Unequal Rules, Not 12 Minutes

The 12-minute cap on TV advertising is often framed as the core problem, but the larger distortion lies in the regulatory asymmetry between traditional broadcasters and digital/FAST platforms.

Broadcasters operate under strict caps, pay significant license and spectrum fees (₹4,500+ crore sector-wide annually), and carry public-interest and content obligations, while ad-supported OTT and CTV services face no equivalent quantitative caps or sector-specific levies. At the same time, free, ad-heavy streaming channels routinely run well beyond 12 – 15 minutes of ads per hour, monetising Indian audiences without the cost structure or accountability imposed on licensed TV networks.

This creates a fundamental asymmetry: the most regulated segment is also the most cost-burdened, while the least regulated segment is the most profitable.

The table from our earlier analysis makes this stark:

The Real Math Behind the Collapse

The numbers around distribution and revenue show why December 2025 became a breaking point:

Pay-TV Subscriber Crisis:

  • FY19: 72 million DTH subscribers
  • FY24: 62 million subscribers (14% decline in 5 years)
  •  FY25 projected: Below 51 million (additional 18% decline)
  • Six-year total collapse: 29%

This is not a slowdown. This is accelerating exit.

Revenue Context That Explains Everything:

  • TV advertising revenue is declining 1.5% in 2025 to ₹477.4 billion
  • Meanwhile, the overall advertising market grows 9.2% year-on-year to ₹1.8 trillion
  • Translation: TV is shrinking while every other channel thrives

This single comparison proves the problem isn’t cyclical. It’s structural. When the overall ad market is growing by 9% and TV is declining by 1.5%, you’re not looking at recession—you’re looking at displacement. Advertisers aren’t spending less. They’re spending their money elsewhere.

Employment Toll:

Between 2018 and 2025, India’s cable television and broadcast distribution sector lost 577,000 jobs according to AIDCF-EY India reports. That’s not just a number – it is:

  • 114,000 to 195,000 jobs lost in the LCO (Local Cable Operator) distribution layer
  •  900 MSOs (Multi-System Operators) shuttered
  •  72,000 local cable operators closed
  •  Content production teams laid off: Zee Entertainment cut 15% of workforce (686 employees) in April 2024; JioStar cut 1,100 employees in March 2025

December 2025: From Complaint to Defiance

By late 2025, broadcaster behaviour reflected this structural squeeze more clearly than any representation to the regulator. Networks began surrendering or rationalising TV licenses and HD feeds, not citing the 12 – minute cap in their letters, but instead citing:

“High operating costs and weak monetisation” (ABP Network, closing ABP News HD) “Financial unviability” (general theme across surrenders)
“Changing market conditions” (regulatory-speak for “the rules are broken”)

The surrender wave included:

  • JioStar: Colors Odia, MTV Beats, VH1, Comedy Central
  •  Zee Entertainment: Zee Sea (uplink-only license shutdown)
  • NDTV: Gujarati news channel shelved
  •  ABP Network: ABP News HD closed
  •  Enter10 Media: Dangal HD and Dangal Oriya licenses surrendered
  •  Sony Pictures Networks/Culver Max: 26 downlinking permissions surrendered

These weren’t tactical complaints. They were permanent exits from linear TV altogether, with capital and content being redirected to digital-first strategies.

This shift is less a tactical protest and more a form of defiance: a signal that continuing to play under an uneven rulebook is worse than shrinking the linear footprint and betting entirely on OTT, FAST, or bundled digital products.

Why Giving Broadcasters “3 More Minutes” Misses the Point

If the problem were genuinely about ad inventory, ABP would have asked for a cap increase. Instead, they closed the channel entirely, citing “weak monetisation.”

Why? Because 3 more minutes of ads doesn’t fix the underlying math:

The Economics ABP Did:

  • We’re losing 40+ million pay-TV households to digital (72M → 51M projected)
  •  Our ad rates are declining because CPMs (cost per mille) are lower for shrinking inventory
  •  Our content costs haven’t fallen proportionally
  •  Even if we run 15 minutes instead of 12, we’re monetising 30% fewer subscribers
  • Meanwhile, digital platforms run 20+ minutes of ads to the same or larger audiences with zero licensing costs
  • Conclusion: Shut down and redirect capital to digital or bundled platforms

This is rational corporate strategy, not obstinacy. And it’s the ultimate indictment of the regulatory framework: when compliance becomes worse than exit, the rules have failed.

Why Policy Must Move From Caps to Convergence

The December 2025 flashpoint shows that debating whether 12 or 15 minutes of ads is “fair” misses the core question entirely: should India regulate screens or pipes?

As long as only licensed broadcasters are quantitatively constrained while competing video environments remain uncapped, ad load regulation becomes a penalty on the most accountable segment rather than a consumer-protection tool.

A convergence framework is the only viable path forward:

Uniform ad-density principles across TV, CTV, and OTT—perhaps 15 minutes/hour for all ad-supported video, applied equally
Shared contribution to local content and public-service funds from all revenue-generating video platforms (5% of ad revenue)
Consistent transparency standards across all platforms—real-time viewership data, measurement standards, audience verification
Without convergence, ad load regulation becomes a noose around the most regulated segment while others operate freely.

The Message Behind the Numbers

December 2025 defiance from broadcasters is not just a pushback against one TRAI order; it is an industry-wide statement that the model fails under unequal rules.

The collapse in pay-TV reach (29% decline in 6 years), the job losses across cable and broadcast (577,000), and the strategic retreat from some licences all point to the same conclusion:

TV advertising isn’t collapsing because 12 minutes of inventory is inherently unworkable. TV advertising is collapsing because that cap operates in a market where rival ad-funded video faces almost no equivalent constraints.

Unless regulation catches up with how audiences actually watch video today, more broadcasters will quietly choose exit and downsizing over fighting a game in which the rules are structurally tilted against them.

The January 27 High Court hearing will decide whether the 12-minute cap survives as a rule. But the market has already decided: broadcasters are exiting the game. The policy window isn’t whether to allow 15 minutes instead of 12. It’s whether to create fair rules that keep any linear broadcasting alive in India.

What Now?

To Policymakers (TRAI & MIB): Stop enforcing asymmetric rules. Collaborate on convergence regulation—one rulebook for all ad-supported video. Do this before January 27, or the court ruling becomes irrelevant because the industry has already moved on.

To Remaining Broadcasters: The license surrenders are your warning. Consolidate, go digital-first, or propose your own modernized regulatory framework. Don’t wait for salvation from regulators who’ve lost control of the ecosystem.

To Advertisers: Demand transparency and fair competition metrics. Your wallet determines what survives. If you want Indian-accountable media institutions to exist in 2030, you’ll need to demand the regulatory framework that makes them economically viable.

(Views are personal)

Tags: AiNxtGenGV Krishnamurthy

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