Ofcom approval of changes to Channel 3 licences

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STV Group PLC has received approval from Ofcom to amend its Channel 3 licences concerning news content, specifically for its flagship programme, STV News at 6. These changes, the first in twenty years, will allow STV to produce two versions of STV News at 6, with up to 70% shared content across Scotland and a minimum of 30% bespoke regional sections for the north and central areas, reflecting significant shifts in audience viewing behaviour towards digital platforms. The company will also expand its digital news service while maintaining newsgathering resources across Scotland and key Westminster and Holyrood locations, ensuring a sustainable and modern news service.

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STV Group PLC
01 June 2026
 

 

 

Monday 1 June

 

 

STV WELCOMES OFCOM APPROVAL OF CHANGES TO ITS CHANNEL 3 LICENCES

 

·    STV will produce two new STV News at 6 programmes with shared content and bespoke regional sections

·    Trusted news will continue to be delivered from reporters across Scotland

·    STV will expand its fast-growing digital news service

·    Changes made in response to major shifts in viewing behaviour

·    Approval enables STV to deliver a sustainable, progressive, modern news service

 

STV welcomes Ofcom's approval of its application to amend its Public Service Media (PSM) Channel 3 licences around news content, in particular flagship programme, STV News at 6

 

As a result of these changes to news commitments, the first in twenty years, the broadcaster will continue serving its audiences with high-quality regional news, gathered and produced across Scotland, in a way that is sustainable for the business. At its heart, the approval extends the scope for STV to share content across the north and central regions, alongside the production of bespoke regional sections, creating new and updated versions of STV News at 6.

 

STV's application was submitted in response to significant, long-term changes in the way audiences consume news, with linear audiences declining alongside a growth in engagement with online and social content throughout the day. These shifts in audience behaviour are impacting all broadcasters, and the changes to STV's Channel 3 licences reflect the acute challenges presented in Ofcom's research and call for action in the sector in its report, Transmission Critical: The future of Public Service Media.

 

STV now plans to implement changes to its news programming in the summer:

 

·    STV will create two versions of STV News at 6

·    STV News at 6 programmes will include a shared section broadcast by both licences (a maximum of 70% of programmes' duration) featuring stories of interest across Scotland with contributions from reporters around the country, plus separate sections with content specific to each of the north and central areas (a minimum of 30% of the programmes)

·    Newsgathering resources will remain on the ground at all existing sites in Inverness, Aberdeen, Glasgow, Edinburgh and Dundee as well as Holyrood and Westminster

·    Presentation of STV News at 6 will be from its Glasgow studio, with the Aberdeen studio also regularly in use

·    The presenting team will include senior journalists from both the north and central regions

·    A wide range of local, regional and national stories will be available across multiple platforms throughout the day via STV's rapidly expanding digital news operation

·    This change enables STV News at 6 to retain the distinct regional character of both licences, with delivery of high-quality, relevant news across both its linear and digital services, on a sustainable basis and reflecting the ways people now consume news

·    Ofcom has also approved the sharing of shorter bulletins at other times of the day and the removal of the four sub-regional opts.

 

Through these changes, STV will rebalance its news resources to ensure that whilst 6pm remains a landmark moment in the schedule every weekday, with dedicated regional sections delivering bespoke content to viewers in the north and central regions, it is also able to expand its digital news service.

 

STV's CEO, Rufus Radcliffe, said:

 

"We're incredibly proud of STV News at 6, which remains Scotland's most watched news programme, but like all Public Service Media companies, we must respond to the significant shift in audience behaviour.

 

"The changes Ofcom has approved to our licences will enable us to continue serving viewers with the high-quality, trusted national and regional news they expect from us. Crucially, this will be sustainable for our business and will be accessible on air and across all the digital platforms viewers now expect.

 

"As a commercial Public Service Broadcaster, that receives no public funding, we are focused on the future and what we do best - trusted news and high-quality content that continues to resonate with audiences across all of Scotland."

 

ENDS

 

Media contact: Kirstin Stevenson | 07803 970106 | Kirstin.stevenson@stv.tv

 

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