European Summer Time is the arrangement in Europe by which clocks are advanced by one hour in spring to make the most of seasonal daylight. This is done in all of the countries of Europe except Iceland which observes Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) all year round, and Russia, which has two time zones in Europe: Kaliningrad Oblast, which observes Kaliningrad Time, (UTC+03:00), and the rest of European Russia, which observes Moscow Time, (UTC+04:00).
The period extends from 01:00 UTC on the last Sunday in March until 01:00 UTC on the last Sunday in October each year. Europe is not currently observing Summer Time.[1]
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Historically the countries of Europe had different practices for observing summer time, but this hindered coordination of transport, communications and movements. However by the 1980s with international flights becoming common the European Community began issuing directives requiring member states to legislate particular start and end dates for summer-time.
Since 1981 each directive has specified a transition time of 01:00 UTC and a start date of the last Sunday in March, but the end dates have differed. In 1981 and 1982 the end dates were the fourth Sunday in October. In 1983 the end date was changed to the last Sunday in September for all time zones other than Western European Time. In 1996 the end date for all time zones was changed to the fourth Sunday in October. In 1998 the end date was adjusted to be the last Sunday in October; this happened to be the same as the previous rule for 1996 and 1997.[2] The ninth directive, currently in force, has made this permanent.[3]
European Summer Time begins (clocks go forward) at 01:00 UTC on
Formula used to calculate the beginning of European Summer Time:
Sunday (31 − ((((5 * y) ÷ 4) + 4) mod 7)) March at 01:00 GMT
(valid until 2099[4]), where y is the year, and for the nonnegative a, a mod b is the remainder of division after truncating both operands to an integer.
European Summer Time ends (clocks go backward) at 01:00 GMT on
Formula used to calculate the end of European Summer Time:
Sunday (31 − ((((5 * y) ÷ 4) + 1) mod 7)) October at 01:00 GMT
(validity as above).
In most of Europe the word Summer is added to the name of each European time zone during this period: thus, in the UTC+01:00 time zone, Central European Time becomes Central European Summer Time (UTC+02:00).
In the United Kingdom local time during this period is known as British Summer Time (BST) while local time during the rest of the year is normally referred to as Greenwich Mean Time.
In Ireland, local time during this period is known as "IST", which officially stands for "Irish Standard Time", not "Irish Summer Time". Ireland's official timezone is CET (UTC+1), but this only applies during the summer (when areas in Europe that use CET are in CEST), with clocks being moved back one hour for winter time (known variously in the country as WET, UTC or GMT).
All parts of Western and Central Europe (except Iceland) whether or not in the EU, use the EU rules for both the date and the time of their clock changes.
Until it ceased observing daylight saving time in 2011, Russia and Belarus observed Summer Time and make the change forward and back on the same dates as the European Union (respectively, on the last Sunday in March and the last Sunday in October) – with the difference, that the changeover on both dates took place in RU & BY not at 01:00 UTC as in the rest of Europe, but at 02:00 local time (03:00 local daylight-saving time in October) in each time zone.
Turkey observes the EU rules for both the date and the time of its clock changes.
For the year 2011, Turkey switched to European Summer Time at 3:00 am in the night from Sunday March 27 to Monday March 28, one day later than the rest of Europe, to avoid disrupting the examination for admission to higher education (YGS) held nation-wide on March 27.[5]