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An Ofcom investigation report, released on 20 June, found Channel 4 to be in breach of its broadcasting license as some programs went almost two months without subtitles, sign language, or audio description.

fire-suppressant gas system

On 25 September 2021, the fire-suppressant gas system was triggered at Red Bee Media, a broadcast center that provides services such as subtitling for Channel 4, as well as the BBC and Channel 5, destroying hard disks and affecting hundreds of hours of programming. 

Channel 4’s accessibility services were not fully restored until 19 November 2021, resulting in the channel subtitling only 85.41% of programming, falling short of its quota of 90%.

disaster recovery measures

Ofcom found Channel 4 to be in breach of another license condition, as no information about the outage was given

Ofcom also found that Channel 4’s disaster recovery measures were not suitably resilient, as the backup system for subtitles also failed. It took a month for subtitles to be restored on Sky, Freeview, Youview, and Virgin Media, and another month for subtitles to be restored on Freesat.

By failing to effectively communicate with the affected audiences after the incident, Ofcom found Channel 4 to be in breach of another license condition, as no information about the outage was given to viewers for 12 days.

improve resilience

A review of the incident, conducted in the aftermath, has highlighted the need for all UK broadcasters to improve their resilience in the event of a disaster or outage.

Channel 4 has been tasked with reporting their improvements and progress in this regard to Ofcom by the end of 2022. They must also demonstrate continued improvements for the accessibility of their programming.

statutory requirement

We have found that Channel 4 managed to meet the statutory requirement to subtitle 90% of its program hours"

A statement from Ofcom said, “We have found that Channel 4 managed to meet the statutory requirement to subtitle 90% of its program hours over 2021 on most programs. It also met its requirements for audio description and signing.

However, Channel 4 fell short of its subtitling quota on Freesat, a satellite TV platform used by around two million UK homes.

catastrophic event

A statement from Channel 4 said, “Channel 4 is very disappointed with Ofcom’s decision and will review its findings carefully. We would like to apologize once again to our audiences for the disruption to our access services following the catastrophic incident last September and since then we have implemented several new systems and processes to avoid a serious incident in the future.”

Channel 4 would like to reassure our audiences that we have thoroughly reviewed the resilience of our systems to ensure that such a catastrophic event cannot harm our ability to deliver these essential services in the future.”

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