Nominations are now open for the prestigious IBC2024 Innovation Awards.
This year’s awards bring together IBC’s innovation and social impact awards under one umbrella to enable a single celebration of different industry advances across five categories. All parts of the IBC community are invited to put forward entries for projects, programmes, and initiatives.
.jpg)
Nominations close at midnight (BST) on 31 May 2024 with the awards ceremony set to take place at IBC on Sunday 15 September at the RAI Amsterdam.
The expanded IBC Innovation Awards recognise the best in collaborative efforts to develop new solutions to real-world technical challenges and to address social and environmental issues. The five categories are: Content Creation, Content Distribution, Content Everywhere, Social Impact, and Environment & Sustainability.
“The IBC Innovation Awards are an IBC keystone, recognising industry innovations of all types – enabling our community to celebrate together those critical breakthroughs we have made during the past year,” said Fergal Ringrose, IBC Innovation Awards Chair of the Judges. “This year’s awards reflect the many ways in which industry pioneers are redefining media – whether through technological or social advances. The expanded awards exemplify IBC efforts to lead innovation, highlighting the spirit of cooperation and creative accomplishments that positively impact the businesses involved and the industry overall.”
The three established technical categories of the IBC Innovation Awards recognise completed projects of any size that have overcome real-world creative, operational, or commercial challenges faced in the media and entertainment industry through solutions demonstrating cooperation between end users and technology partners. The two further categories recognise initiatives and campaigns that are making a difference within the industry in social advancement and equality, and environmental responsibility.
The winners of the 2023 IBC Innovation Awards were: The BBC and partners for the world’s largest pop-up 5G standalone non-public network, using shared spectrum for live broadcast contributions for the Coronation of HM King Charles III (Content Creation); Sky Group for its cloud-native software playout platform enabling origination of linear content TV channels across European territories (Content Distribution); and KAN, which changed the way Israeli audiences watched World Cup Qatar 2022 and Eurovision 2023 with Sport BUFF real-time interactive engagement (Content Everywhere).
The winners of the 2023 IBC Social Impact Awards, now joined with the Innovation Awards, were: RTVE, which used Artificial Intelligence (AI) to provide local election news coverage of nearly 5,000 small Spanish municipalities; SWI swissinfo.ch, which introduced a data-driven process to evaluate the use of inclusive language in its multi-lingual digital newsroom; and Iron Mountain Data Centers, which are on the path to using 100% locally sourced clean electricity, 100% of the time, to make their operations carbon-free.
You are not signed in
Only registered users can comment on this article.

Wimbledon 2025 drives record digital audience for BBC Sport
Wimbledon attracted a record-breaking 69.3m online requests for BBC Sport from 30 June to 13 July – the highest ever digital engagement for the tennis championships on record.

WPP names Microsoft’s Cindy Rose as next CEO
Ad agency giant WPP has appointed Microsoft executive Cindy Rose as its next CEO, replacing Mark Read when he steps down on September 1.

HBO’s Harry Potter TV series starts production at Leavesden
HBO’s Harry Potter television series has officially started production at Warner Bros. Studios Leavesden in the UK.
.jpg)
Ofcom explores how tech firms can help users spot AI deepfakes
UK regulator Ofcom has published a discussion paper exploring the different tools and techniques that tech firms can use to help users identify deepfake AI-generated videos.

Small changes can reduce energy use in genAI by 90%, says UNESCO report
Small changes to how AI large language models (LLMs) are built and used can dramatically reduce energy consumption without compromising performance, according to new research published by the UN’s science and cultural organisation UNESCO and UK university UCL.