The Asian Age

IIT- G students for separate N- E time zone

- MANOJ ANAND

The students of Indian Institute of Technology, Guwahati ( IIT- G), have embarked upon an ambitious plan for a separate time zone in the Northeast to utilise the resources better.

The time difference between the western- most part and the eastern- most point of India is about two hours, the effect of which is that the sun rises and sets much earlier in the Northeast than it does in the rest of the country.

It is also significan­t that several studies have endorsed the proposal for separate time zones over the years, concluding that mere advancing the time can enhance efficiency and productivi­ty of many industrial and non- industrial processes and conserve billions of units of electricit­y.

Loss of daylight during working hours ( for the country runs on one time zone) is also the prime concern of the students’ fraternity of

IIT- G that is trying to build public opinion on the issue during

TEDx, an event of the institute, on February

10.

Before IIT students, noted intellectu­al and renowned filmmaker

Jahnu Barua had also launched a similar campaign as he argued that by following IST, the Northeast has gone behind by 25 years 10 months in productivi­ty and incurred a total wastage of electricit­y at homes and offices worth ` 94,900 crore since Independen­ce.

His campaign with many other intellectu­als and social workers had compelled the Central government to appoint the V. S. Ramamurthy Committee in 2001 to look into the possibilit­y of reverting to two time zones, but the committee decided against the propositio­n. However, it advocated starting and ending office hours earlier in the east so that people in that region can take advantage of early daylight.

The IIT students, advocating a separate time zone, said, “Indians, in the year 1884, had multiple time zones. After Independen­ce, the government decided to adopt one time for the whole country to promote unity. However, the demands and circumstan­ces have changed since 1947. Today, we are a developing nation with an enormous population. It’s required to wisely use all the resources at our disposal without wastage.”

The organisers of the event have roped in renowned author Arup Kumar Dutta, who had also campaigned on the issue for long. “In winter, the sun sets in the Northeast as early as 4 pm. A common person is losing about one hour of daylight daily. On an average, two years of his life gets wasted, besides facing the risk of various health issues,” said Vinit Yadav, a B. Tech student and leading crusader for the separate time zone movement in IIT- G.

He added that an “unjust” time zone has a deep impact on the productivi­ty of people and increases the electricit­y usage due to late working schedule in the offices.

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