Katana VentraIP

Discovery Science (European TV channel)

Discovery Science is a pay television network, operated by Warner Bros. Discovery EMEA. It targets several European countries' television markets. It primarily features programming in the fields of space, technology and science. The channel originally launched as Discovery Sci-Trek. Its programming is mainly in English and locally subtitled or dubbed. It is available through numerous subscription services across Europe. In some countries the advertisement and the announcements between programs are localized.

This article is about the European channel. For the US channel, see Science Channel.

Country

1080i HDTV
(downscaled to 16:9 576i for the SDTV feed)

Discovery Science +1

1 October 1998 (1998-10-01)

9 March 2022 (2022-03-09) (Russia)
5 January 2024 (2024-01-05) (Central and Eastern Europe, Central Asia, Middle East, Africa, and Turkey)
26 February 2024 (2024-02-26) (France)

TLC (France)

  • Discovery Sci-Trek (1997–2003)
  • Discovery Science Channel (2003–2008)

Discovery Science, alongside DTX, ceased broadcasting in Central and Eastern Europe and the Middle East on 5 January 2024. The channel started to be removed from the TV operators from 1 January 2024.[1][2][3][4] However, the channel continues to broadcast in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Poland, the Nordic region and the Netherlands.

History[edit]

On 19 August 1998, Discovery announced they would launch several new digital channels to coincide with the launch of Sky Digital platform, one of which would be Discovery Sci-Trek, a UK version of the Discovery Science Channel in the United States. However, despite early plans to launch it under the US name, the channel went on air as Discovery Sci-Trek on 1 October 1998.[5]


The channel later saw launches in other European countries, and eventually the channel rebranded as the Discovery Science Channel on 1 April 2003.[6][7]


In April 2008, the channel's name was shortened to simply Discovery Science, which was followed by the launch of a one-hour timeshift service on 21 April 2008 in the United Kingdom, located on Sky 549, which replaced a placeholder 90-minute timeshift of Discovery Channel, known as Discovery +1.5.[8]


On 24 January 2013, Discovery channels returned on Numericable in France.[9] In December 2016, Altice acquired an exclusivity agreement with NBCUniversal and Discovery Networks.[10][11] Discovery Channel, Discovery Science and Investigation Discovery were removed from Canal+ on 17 January 2017.[12] The channel (along with Discovery Channel) had high shares (0,5% in 2014, 0,4% in 2016[13]) before have been removed from Canal+.[14]


On 9 March 2022, Discovery Inc. closed Discovery Science in Russia due to Russia's invasion of Ukraine.[15]


In February 2024, it was announced that the channel would be replaced by TLC in France from February 26, 2024.[16]

Beyond Tomorrow

Building the Ultimate

Burn Notice

Extreme Engineering

Food Factory

How It's Made

How Do They Do It?

How Machines Work

Invention Nation

Nextworld

Pasik

Race to Mars

Raging Planet

Rough Science

Ten Ways

The Big Experiment

Through the Wormhole

Understanding

Universe (narrated by )

John Hurt

The Gadget Show

Logos[edit]

Throughout its life as the Discovery Sci-Trek Channel, the channel used an image of the rings of Saturn as its logo and in idents. When relaunching as the Discovery Science Channel, it became a stylised molecule, with the Discovery Channel globe as one of its atoms.


Since then, the channel had followed its United States counterpart The Science Channel, currently known as 'Science', in logo trends. In March 2008, Discovery Science adopted a modified version of the periodic table logo used from 2007, and in 2012, the channel adopted the new 'Morph' logo introduced in 2011.

CAI Harderwijk (Netherlands): Channel 135

(Netherlands): Channel 111

Caiway

Citycable (Switzerland): Channel 81

(Netherlands): Channel 352

DELTA

(Netherlands): Channel 255

Kabel Noord

(France): Channel 41

SFR

Stichting Kabelnet Veendam (Netherlands): Channel 76

(Poland): Channel 377

UPC

(Romania): Channel 308

UPC

(Switzerland): Channel 179 (Romandy), Channel 479 (German Swiss) and Channel 679 (Ticino)

UPC

(Ireland): Channel 211

Virgin Media

(UK): Channel 179 and Channel 379 (+1)

Virgin Media

(UK): Channel 77

WightFibre

(Netherlands): Channel 202

Ziggo

Science Channel

Archived 8 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine

Netherlands

UK