Summary

Most European countries moved clocks forward one hour on Sunday, marking the start of daylight saving time (DST), a practice increasingly criticized.

Originally introduced during World War I to conserve energy, DST returned during the 1970s oil crisis and now shifts Central European Time to Central European Summer Time.

Despite a 2018 EU consultation where 84% of nearly 4 million respondents supported abolishing DST, implementation stalled due to member state disagreement.

Poland, currently holding the EU presidency, plans informal consultations to revisit the issue amid broader geopolitical priorities.

  • huppakee@lemm.ee
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    13 days ago

    Yes, but the EU is split into four time zones now and if you implement this technically there would be many more:

    8 if we’d have 30-min time-zones 16 if we’d have 15-min time-zones 24 if we’d have 10-min time-zones 48 if we’d have 5-min time-zones 240 if we’d have 1-min time-zones

    I’m not saying we should keep dst, but we can’t have everyone have midday at 12:00 and midnight at 00:00.

    • Pennomi@lemmy.world
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      13 days ago

      You can keep 1 hour time zones just fine. It still puts noon within 1 hour of mid day, which you don’t get with DST.