RTÉ’s Brian Wynne elected to lead EBU’s cloud and AI roadmap
Brian Wynne of RTÉ has been elected as the new Chair of the EBU Technical Committee, succeeding Michael Eberhard of ARD/SWR. Supported by newly elected Vice-Chairs Simon Tuff (BBC) and Sascha Schwoll (SWR/ARD), the committee will direct the EBU's collaborative strategic programs on cloud, data, and AI systems.
Key Takeaways
- Brian Wynne (RTÉ) succeeds Michael Eberhard (ARD/SWR) as Chair through 2028.
- Leadership team includes Vice-Chairs Simon Tuff (BBC) and Sascha Schwoll (SWR/ARD).
- Committee oversees 13 member representatives directing the EBU Technology & Innovation department.
- Strategic workplan focuses on cloud transformation, data integration, and generative AI systems.
Why It Matters
The EBU Technical Committee acts as the primary collective engine for standardizing the technology stacks of European public broadcasters. By electing Wynne, the EBU is signaling a shift from experimental AI and cloud projects toward full-scale industrial action. This shift aims to consolidate the bargaining power of European broadcasters against global tech platforms while streamlining high-cost infrastructure like software-defined production. For the broader ecosystem, this signals a coordinated push toward open media standards and sovereign data platforms. Watch for the committee’s first biennial workplan update in late 2026 to see specific benchmarks for cross-border AI sandbox deployments.
Additional Context
The leadership change follows a period of heavy technical expansion for the EBU. In June 2026, the organization celebrated significant progress in software-defined workflows, with Sweden’s SVT winning the EBU Technology & Innovation Award for its 'Neo' live production platform used during the Winter Olympics. This platform highlights the industry's move toward containerized, hardware-independent broadcasting. Per Broadband TV News (June 2026), other finalists included ORF’s full SMPTE ST 2110 transformation, which reduced physical rack space by 66%, and France Télévisions’ 'Alix' multi-cloud platform that integrates AI inference directly into media workflows. These projects serve as the baseline for the committee’s new mandate to scale collaborative infrastructure. Distribution strategy remains a dual-track priority under the new committee. In March 2026, RTÉ announced its own DVB-I trials on the Saorview platform, intended to run through November 2026 to evaluate hybrid broadcast-broadband discovery. Concurrently, the EBU has been coordinating large-scale 5G-Broadcast trials, most recently at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics in partnership with RAI. Per Broadcast Networks Europe (May 2026), these trials are part of a broader push to prove that terrestrial low-UHF infrastructure can deliver linear video to mobile devices without SIM cards or mobile data plans. The Technical Committee is tasked with reconciling these emerging distribution standards with traditional linear formats to prevent audience fragmentation across Europe.
Read full article at advanced-television.com
