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{{short description|Mexican news channel}}
[[Image:Eco1988.png|thumb|right|150px|Noticias ECO logo in 1988‎]]
[[Image:Eco1997.png‎|thumb|right|150px|Noticias ECO logo in 1997]]
[[File:ECO logo.png|thumbnail|Noticias ECO Logo of 1988 to 2001.]]
[[File:Eco1997.png|thumbnail|Noticias ECO Logo of 1994 to 1997.]]
'''Noticias ECO''' (''Empresa de Comunicaciones Orbitales''), also know as ECO News, <ref>http://www.elpais.es/articulo/sociedad/Televisa/cierra/canal/noticias/ECO/falta/rentabilidad/elpepisoc/20010419elpepisoc_13/Tes/</ref> was a [[Mexico|Mexican]] [[news channel]], which broadcasted since [[1 September]] [[1988]]<ref>http://www.etcetera.com.mx/pag29ne7.asp</ref> until [[1 May]] [[2001]]. It was the first 24-hour news channel in Spanish and was owned by [[Televisa]].
'''Noticias ECO''' (''Empresa de Comunicaciones Orbitales, S.A. de C.V.'', lit. Orbital Communications Company), also known as ECO News,<ref>[http://www.elpais.es/articulo/sociedad/Televisa/cierra/canal/noticias/ECO/falta/rentabilidad/elpepisoc/20010419elpepisoc_13/Tes/ Televisa cierra el canal de noticias ECO por su falta de rentabilidad · ELPAÍS.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> was a Mexican [[news channel]], which broadcast from 1 September 1988<ref>[http://www.etcetera.com.mx/pag29ne7.asp etcétera<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> to 1 May 2001. It was the first 24-hour news channel in Spanish and was owned by [[Televisa]]. It closed due to low profits.


Its signal covered the [[Americas]], [[Europe]] and [[Northern Africa]] via satellite, with correspondents in 32 countries<ref>http://cvc.cervantes.es/obref/congresos/zacatecas/television/proyectos/cortesca.htm</ref>. Some of the other Televisa's networks slots, as [[Galavisión]] and [[XEW-TV|Canal de las Estrellas]], were filled with ECO newscasts.
Its signal covered the [[Americas]], [[Europe]] and [[Northern Africa]] via satellite, with correspondents in 32 countries.<ref>[http://congresosdelalengua.es/zacatecas/ponencias/television/proyectos/cortesca.htm I CILE - La televisión (El sistema de noticias Eco) Félix Cortés Camarillo]</ref> Some of the other Televisa networks, such as [[Galavisión (Mexico)|Galavisión]] and [[Canal de las Estrellas]], included or simulcast ECO newscasts.

In 2010, [[FOROtv|Canal de la Ciudad]], which had been airing programs targeted toward Mexico City, was relaunched as '''[[FOROtv]]''' with a full slate of news and opinion programs. This marks the first time since ECO's closure that Televisa has operated a mainly-news channel.


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
<references/>

{{Spanish-language news channels}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Noticias Eco}}
[[Category:Televisa pay television networks]]
[[Category:Television channels and stations established in 1988]]
[[Category:Television channels and stations disestablished in 2001]]
[[Category:24-hour television news channels in Mexico]]
[[Category:Defunct television channels in Mexico]]



{{Mexico-bcast-stub}}
{{Mexico-tv-station-stub}}
{{tv-station-stub}}
[[Category:Televisa]]
[[Category:1988 establishments]]
[[Category:2001 disestablishments]]
[[Category:Television networks]]
[[Category:Television stations in Mexico]]
[[Category:24-hour television news channels]]
[[Category:Defunct television channels]]

Latest revision as of 15:31, 31 January 2022

Noticias ECO Logo of 1988 to 2001.
Noticias ECO Logo of 1994 to 1997.

Noticias ECO (Empresa de Comunicaciones Orbitales, S.A. de C.V., lit. Orbital Communications Company), also known as ECO News,[1] was a Mexican news channel, which broadcast from 1 September 1988[2] to 1 May 2001. It was the first 24-hour news channel in Spanish and was owned by Televisa. It closed due to low profits.

Its signal covered the Americas, Europe and Northern Africa via satellite, with correspondents in 32 countries.[3] Some of the other Televisa networks, such as Galavisión and Canal de las Estrellas, included or simulcast ECO newscasts.

In 2010, Canal de la Ciudad, which had been airing programs targeted toward Mexico City, was relaunched as FOROtv with a full slate of news and opinion programs. This marks the first time since ECO's closure that Televisa has operated a mainly-news channel.

References

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