Written Ministerial Statement from the Minister for Sport and Tourism on Premier League Broadcasting Rights

13 May 2021 11:52 AM

Written Ministerial Statement to the House of Commons and House of Lords on a potential Exclusion Order on the Premier League's domestic broadcasting rights.

The Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) has written to the Premier League and to Sky, BT, Amazon and the BBC, as the current holders of broadcast rights to the Premier League in the UK, to inform them that the Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS) is ‘minded to’ make an Exclusion Order under the Competition Act 1998, allowing the Premier League to renew its current broadcast agreements with current UK broadcast partners for an additional three-year period starting 2022-23, without conducting the normal tender process.

In order to remain consistent with past commitments to competition authorities and to avoid a potential breach of competition law, and absent Covid-19, the Premier League would normally have re-tendered its domestic broadcast rights in early 2021 at the midpoint of the current three-year cycle and would have concluded sales by now. However, Covid-19 has had a significant impact on the value of broadcast rights for football across Europe. Under an auction, it is plausible that the value of the Premier League’s domestic rights could drop.

The football pyramid receives the majority of its funding via the Premier League’s broadcast revenue. The Premier League and its clubs have already experienced financial losses totalling over £1.5 billion due to the impact of the pandemic, with further losses projected into next season. The wider football pyramid, from the Championship through to women’s football and the grassroots, has also suffered financial losses due to the pandemic.

The Government has been clear that football has the resources to support itself financially to deal with the consequences of the Covid-19 pandemic. To provide financial stability for the football pyramid, the Premier League has therefore requested that the Government make an Exclusion Order allowing it to renew its current broadcast agreements for an additional three years, on the same commercial and license terms, with current UK broadcast partners, without conducting a tender process.

Under paragraph 7 of Schedule 3 to the Competition Act 1998, the Secretary of State for Business Energy and Industrial Strategy has the power to exclude, via a so-called “Exclusion Order”, certain agreements from the application of UK competition law where there are ‘exceptional and compelling reasons of public policy’ to do so.

If such an Exclusion Order is made, the Premier League has committed to:

The Secretary of State for BEIS and DCMS Ministers have considered the impact of Covid on the English football pyramid and are minded to agree the Government should act to enable the Premier League to provide financial stability to protect the pyramid following heavily disrupted seasons due to Covid, for the following reasons.

The Government is in the process of a fan-led review of football governance, and the Premier League is undertaking a Strategic Review. The proposed Exclusion Order would not preclude those reviews from acting to change the distribution of broadcast revenue, but it would provide a level of certainty for the wider football pyramid and a minimum level of funding to maintain stability to 2024/25.

On advice from my Department, the Secretary of State for BEIS is satisfied that the Premier League’s funding commitments as set out above would provide vital financial stability for the English football pyramid, allowing football to support itself financially, and that renewing the Premier League’s domestic broadcasting rights for a limited period of three years only will help to minimise any possible detrimental effects on the broadcasting market and consumers.

On balance, the Secretary of State for BEIS is minded to conclude that there are exceptional and compelling reasons of public policy to make the proposed Exclusion Order, but would like to consider any representations from interested parties before a final decision is taken. Written representations should be sent to plbroadcastingexclusionorder@dcms.gov.uk by 1700 on Friday 28 May 2021.

An Exclusion Order, if made, should be seen as a temporary measure in response to the pandemic. The Government is content that this request by the Premier League was not made as a result of the recently proposed European Super League.

Ministers at my department will keep Parliament updated on progress with this case. A copy of the ‘minded to’ letter is being placed in the Library of both Houses.