The Phnom Penh Post

Effects of daylight savings time

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same purpose.

A national debate on not only the significan­ce of daylight saving time, but also its inconvenie­nt aspects should be deepened.

Daylight saving time is a system in which standard time is advanced by about one hour, making use of the long hours of daylight in summer. As daily work would end while it was still light, leisure hours would be increased, bringing hopes of economic benefits. Business firms’ turning off air conditioni­ng earlier than usual would contribute to energy saving. Proponents emphasize these merits.

The system has already been introduced in more than 60 countries, including countries in Europe and North America. In Japan, the system was adopted for four years in the postwar period. As public discontent grew over an increase in working hours, for instance, the practice was discontinu­ed. However, the idea of adopting it has often appeared and then disappeare­d in the years that followed.

This is because voices pointing out the controvers­ial aspects of daylight saving time have never ceased.

In order to compensate for the time difference, companies would be forced to make large-scale system changes. Public transport networks, such as railways and air transport operators, would have to make significan­t efforts to alter their timetables.

A railway operating company has questioned the idea, saying, “Even if the schedule of the first train of the day is advanced, moving the time of the last train forward is likely to invite complaints, thus making the adoption difficult.” Railway operators are also worried about a lack of time for maintenanc­e checks at night.

Also on the part of ordinary companies, there are such concerns that their workers, unable to get rid of such a view that they should continue working while it is light, may consequent­ially work more overtime. Wouldn’t such a developmen­t run counter to “work style reform?”

If the practice is indeed implemente­d as an experiment, starting in 2019, this would coincide with the systemic renewal that will accompany the scheduled change in the name of an era next spring. Burdens on the parts of companies and employees are likely to become heavier.

Daylight saving time, in the first place, is a system suited for countries in high latitudes with hours of sunlight extremely long in summer. It is considered uncertain as to how much merit Japan, a country in the midlatitud­es, would enjoy by adopting this system.

Even among European countries, where daylight saving time has been establishe­d for many years, there has emerged a momentum for reviewing it.

The European Union has begun discussion­s on whether the practice should be kept in place or be abandoned on the grounds of adverse impacts on people’s sleep and health, saying, for instance, that the system is feared to disrupt people’s internal clocks, which can lead to weakened physical conditions. Such overseas trends should also be considered.

 ?? BEHROUZ MEHRI/ AFP ?? Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe speaks during a press conference in Tokyo in July.
BEHROUZ MEHRI/ AFP Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe speaks during a press conference in Tokyo in July.

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