BBC chiefs have pointed to a “highly competitive market” for the uneven performance of its new digital channel for Scotland.

The BBC Scotland digital channel attained just shy of one-third of all audiences in Scotland, new figures show.

Nonetheless the corporation said it remained very encouraged by its early days.
Noting that the channel, which has a main 9pm news bulletin, The Nine, as its centrepiece, has been launched in a “highly competitive market” the corporation said the channel reached 32 per cent of all audiences north of the Border.

This figure, the BBC said, puts it ahead of all other channels in Scotland with the exception of BBC One and ITV.  And they insisted they were looking to the long term. 

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A statement said: “Our long-term aim is to establish a channel that consistently delivers content for contemporary Scotland that resonates with our audiences and the feedback we’ve had so far has been very positive.”

Audiences for The Nine, the station’s flagship show which covers news and current affairs, began strongly and have been variable since then.

The news programme had an average audience of 45,000 and a 3.2% share in Scotland on its first night, with viewer numbers dropping to an average of 12,000 the following night.

It has had an average audience, according to Broadcasters Audience Research Board (BARB) figures, of 28,000, or a 1.8% share. The BBC said the show, which is hosted by Rebecca Curran and Martin Geissler, has reached 329,000 individual viewers.

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A BBC spokesman added: “Again, this is firmly within the performance range of news programmes on digital channels. The news hour is among a large numbers programmes that have received positive audience feedback on social media for the range and quality of its content.”

He added: “We’re very encouraged by the start the BBC Scotland channel has made. It’s exciting and challenging to launch a new service for our audiences in a highly competitive market. 

“Our long-term aim is to establish a channel that consistently delivers content for contemporary Scotland.” The launch night of the channel drew an audience share of 13%, making it only the third most watched channel in Scotland during its hours of broadcast. 

In the six nights following launch, the channel had a 3.1% share of the audience which, the BBC said, “is within the range that Ofcom produced in its research.”