Global Times

European countries in talks on scrapping biannual clock adjustment

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European Union government­s began discussion­s on Monday to assess whether and when to scrap the twice-yearly clock change, amid doubts that the requiremen­t would be dropped in 2019 as the EU executive has proposed.

Last month, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker announced a plan to stop changing Europe’s clocks next year, after millions of people responded to a survey by calling for the decades-old practice to end.

Norbert Hofer, transport minister of Austria, whose country holds the sixmonth rotating presidency of the European Union, told reporters on Monday that 2019 was too soon for most.

“We will need to find a compromise as some countries, actually most, have reservatio­ns about changing the system in 2019,” he said before a meeting of fellow transport ministers in Graz, Austria, a day after clocks went back an hour for winter.

Many countries had referred to an array of technical issues to solve, adding that the airline industry for one had said it needed 18 months to prepare, he said. Monday’s meeting was a first informal discussion with no decision due. The transport ministers’ next formal meeting is on December 3.

The Commission had wanted each EU government to decide by April which time zone they want to be in permanentl­y – whether in October 2019 they want to stay in summer time year-round or turn their clocks back one last time to permanent winter time.

Hofer said Austria agreed that the switch should take place, given studies showing clock changes had a negative effect on people and animals and that they did not meet their original goal of saving energy.

“It has not brought us anything. It was an idea from the 1970s, the time of the oil crisis, and now is the time to end this measure,” he said. “The majority [of countries] supports this goal. There are some countries that are sceptical.”

Danish Transport Minister Ole Birk Olesen said there needed to be a full public debate on the issue, which had not yet happened in Denmark, and it was not realistic to scrap clock changes next year.

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