The library itself was sold with Associated British Picture to
EMI Films and then others, including
The Cannon Group (which split the feature film and newsreel divisions) and the
Daily Mail and General Trust, before relaunching in its own right in 2009. The feature film division is now part of
StudioCanal and is no longer connected with
Pathé, the French film company and the original parent of British Pathé. In 2002, partially funded by the UK
National Lottery, the entire archive was digitised. The British Pathé archive now holds over 3,500 hours of filmed history, 90,000 individual items and 12 million stills. On 7 February 2009, British Pathé launched a
YouTube channel of its newsreel archive. From March 2010, British Pathé relaunched its archive as an online entertainment site, making Pathé News a service for the public as well as the broadcasting industry. In May 2010,
The Guardian was given access to the British Pathé archive, hosting topical videos on its website. In May 2012, British Pathé won the
FOCAL International Award for Footage Library of the Year. In April 2014, British Pathé uploaded the entire collection of 85,000 historic films to its YouTube channel as part of a drive to make the archive more accessible to viewers all over the world. As of 2025, the British Pathé YouTube channel had 1.6 billion views and 3.54 million subscribers. By 2020, the British Pathé archive now includes material from the
Reuters historical collection. Additionally, as historically the British Pathé newsreels covered events in the island of Ireland, while it was variously part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Northern Ireland, the Irish Free State, and later a Republic, that part of the archive was shared with the
Irish Film Institute's
Irish Film Archive, curated as
The Irish Independence Film Collection. This also resulted in a more accurate cataloguing of the locations, people, and the historical context, than the UK office would have historically had. ==Television use==