Åland
A Coruña
Aachen
Albania
Alexandria
Algeria
Alsace
Amsterdam Time
Andorra
Aosta
Aosta Valley
Arad County
Austria
Belgium
Bern
Białystok
Bihor County
Bor District
Bosnia and Herzegovina
British Summer Time
Bulgaria
Canary Islands
Cape Finisterre
Caraş-Severin County
Carpathian Ruthenia
Central European Summer Time
Central European Time
Cologne
Confederation of British Industry
Coordinated Universal Time
Corfu
Corsica
Croatia
Cuneo
Czech Republic
Düsseldorf
Daily Express
Daily Mail
Daylight saving time
Denmark
Eastern European Summer Time
Eastern European Time
Ed Davey
Estonia
Europe
European Summer Time
Finland
Finnmark
France
Fribourg
Galicia (Spain)
Geneva
German Empire
Germany
Gibraltar
Greece
Greenwich Mean Time
Haparanda
Hiiumaa
House of Commons of the United Kingdom
Hungary
Iceland
Ioannina
Ireland
Istanbul
Italy
Jan Mayen
Kaaresuvanto
Kaliningrad
Kalix
Kilpisjärvi
Kirkenes
Klaipėda
Kuressaare
Kyustendil
Latvia
Lausanne
Liechtenstein
Liepāja
List of time zones#UTC.2B1
Lithuania
Lublin
Luxembourg
Macedonia (country)
Main Page
Malta
Mehedinţi County
Member of Parliament
Metropolitan France
Monaco
Montenegro
Moscow Time
Nesterov
Netherlands
Norrbotten
Norway
Parliamentary debate
Patras
Piedmont
Pirot
A Coruña
Aachen
Albania
Alexandria
Algeria
Alsace
Amsterdam Time
Andorra
Aosta
Aosta Valley
Arad County
Austria
Belgium
Bern
Białystok
Bihor County
Bor District
Bosnia and Herzegovina
British Summer Time
Bulgaria
Canary Islands
Cape Finisterre
Caraş-Severin County
Carpathian Ruthenia
Central European Summer Time
Central European Time
Cologne
Confederation of British Industry
Coordinated Universal Time
Corfu
Corsica
Croatia
Cuneo
Czech Republic
Düsseldorf
Daily Express
Daily Mail
Daylight saving time
Denmark
Eastern European Summer Time
Eastern European Time
Ed Davey
Estonia
Europe
European Summer Time
Finland
Finnmark
France
Fribourg
Galicia (Spain)
Geneva
German Empire
Germany
Gibraltar
Greece
Greenwich Mean Time
Haparanda
Hiiumaa
House of Commons of the United Kingdom
Hungary
Iceland
Ioannina
Ireland
Istanbul
Italy
Jan Mayen
Kaaresuvanto
Kaliningrad
Kalix
Kilpisjärvi
Kirkenes
Klaipėda
Kuressaare
Kyustendil
Latvia
Lausanne
Liechtenstein
Liepāja
List of time zones#UTC.2B1
Lithuania
Lublin
Luxembourg
Macedonia (country)
Main Page
Malta
Mehedinţi County
Member of Parliament
Metropolitan France
Monaco
Montenegro
Moscow Time
Nesterov
Netherlands
Norrbotten
Norway
Parliamentary debate
Patras
Piedmont
Pirot
This article is about the time zone with daylight change in Europe. For the static time zone, see UTC+01.
Time zones of Europe:
blue
Western European Time (UTC+0)
Western European Summer Time (UTC+1)
red
Central European Time (UTC+1)
Central European Summer Time (UTC+2)
yellow
Eastern European Time (UTC+2)
Eastern European Summer Time (UTC+3)
green
Moscow Time (UTC+3)
Moscow Summer Time (UTC+4)
Light colours indicate countries that do not observe summer time: Algeria, Iceland and Tunisia
Central European Time (CET), used in most of Europe, is one of the names of the time zone that is 1 hour ahead of Coordinated Universal Time (UTC)/Greenwich Mean Time, with a time offset of UTC+1/GMT+1 (in winter).
Most EU member states have adopted the use of Central European Summer Time (CEST) daylight saving time in summer, with UTC+2.
Contents
1 Usage
1.1 Usage in Europe
1.2 Proposed adoption in the UK
1.3 Central European Summer Time
1.4 Other countries
2 Discrepancies between official CET and geographical CET
2.1 Areas located within UTC+1 longitudes using other time zones
2.1.1 Areas between 7°30′ E and 22°30′ E ("physical" UTC+1), all using UTC+2
2.2 Areas located outside UTC+1 longitudes using UTC+1 time
2.2.1 Areas between 22°30′ W and 7°30′ W ("physical" UTC-1)
2.2.2 Areas between 7°30′ W and 7°30′ E ("physical" UTC)
2.2.3 Areas between 22°30′ E and 37°30' ("physical" UTC+2)
3 See also
4 References
5 External links
//
Usage
Usage in Europe
Exact Central European Time on 15th meridian (Trebnje, Slovenia)
ECB To Review Monetary Policy Amid Rising Inflationary Pressures
All eyes will be on the European Central Bank as its Governing Council is set to announce its interest rate decision on Thursday, as the euro zone battles rising inflation pressures amid the resurfacing of the debt crisis in peripheral economies.
Central European Time - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is about the time zone with daylight change in Europe. ... Central European Time (CET), used in most of Europe, is one of the names of the time zone that is 1 hour ...
The German Empire unified its time zones in 1893, to use CET (MEZ). During the war, this time was implemented in all occupied territories.
Before World War II, Lithuania used CET (MET) in the years 1920–40. In France, Belgium, Netherlands and Luxembourg CET was kept. After the war Monaco, Spain, Andorra and Gibraltar implemented CET.
Portugal used CET in the years 1966–76 and 1992–96.
Proposed adoption in the UK
The time around the world is based on Greenwich Mean Time (Universal Coordinated Time (UTC) is almost exactly the same as GMT). From late March to late October clocks are put forward by an hour to result in British Summer Time, a change which, since 1997, has been aligned with the European Union's norms for CET and other EU time zones. Central European Time is thus always one hour more than British time.
Since the late 1960s, particularly since the 1990s, there have been arguments about the benefits of changing to a system based on Central European Time.
In 1968 there was a three-year experiment when the United Kingdom (and Ireland) experimentally employed British Standard Time (GMT+1) all year round; clocks were put forward in March 1968 and not put back until October 1971. This provided an opportunity to evaluate the impact of aligning with other EC countries on daylight change on a number of issues, particularly road casualties. The conclusions were not clear cut. A review of by the UK Parliament found it was impossible to quantify the most important and advantages and disadvantages, and concluded that a decision on whether to retain the new system would depend on a qualitative judgement. Nor was the experiment universally popular: opponents, particularly those based in Scotland, highlighted an increased number of road accidents (many involving children walking to school) in the dark winter mornings; however, the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents (RoSPA), a strong proponent of a change to Single/Double Summer Time (SDST) in Britain, which would in effect align the UK with CET, has pointed out that this rise was more than compensated for by reductions in casualties in the evening and that, in all, 2,500 deaths and serious injuries were saved in each year of the trial period.12 Nevertheless, the UK Parliament voted by a large majority to discontinue the experiment.
ECB Fails to Sterilize Bond Purchases With Deposits
The European Central Bank failed to fully neutralize the liquidity created by its bond purchases for the third time since the program began.
CET – Central European Time
Information about the time zone abbreviation CET – Central European Time - where it observed and when it is observed
Benefits of a switch to CET that have been cited by RoSPA and supported by other leading organisations such as the Confederation of British Industry include not only include improvements to road casualty figures but also benefits to the environment, business, tourism, leisure, health and well-being, crime and the elderly. In 2010, a Private Members' Bill tabled in the UK Parliament by Conservative Member of Parliament Rebecca Harris, which proposes a move to Single/Double Summer Time, received its first reading in the House of Commons on 3 December 2010, when the lawmakers voted by 92 to 10 in support. However, the bill is unlikely to be passed without Government support, and at the end of the Parliamentary debate concerning the bill the government minister responsible for this area of policy, Ed Davey, said the government opposed the bill, because "the necessary consensus across all parts of the UK does not yet exist to justify a change, or the passing of any legislation on the matter".3 Strong feelings for and against the proposal had been expressed in the British media, with newspapers such as the Daily Express supporting it while others, notably the Daily Mail, opposed it.
Central European Summer Time
The following countries and cities have introduced the use of Central European Summer Time between 1:00 UTC on the last Sunday of March, and 1:00 UTC on the last Sunday of October:
Albania, regularly since 1975
Andorra, regularly since 1984
Austria, regularly since 1980
Belgium, regularly since 1977 (before in 1916 and till 1940)
Bosnia and Herzegovina, regularly since 1983
Croatia, regularly since 1983
Czech Republic, regularly since 1979
Denmark (metropolitan), regularly since 1980
France (metropolitan), regularly since 1976
Germany, regularly since 1980
Gibraltar, regularly since 1982
Hungary, regularly since 1980
Italy, regularly since 1966
Liechtenstein
Luxembourg, regularly since 1977
Macedonia, regularly since 1983
Malta, regularly since 1974
Monaco, regularly since 1976
Montenegro, regularly since 1983
Netherlands (metropolitan), regularly since 1977
Norway, regularly since 1980
Poland, regularly since 1977
San Marino, regularly since 1976
Serbia, regularly since 1983
Slovakia, regularly since 1979
Slovenia, regularly since 1983
Spain (except Canary Islands), regularly since 1974
Sweden, regularly since 1980
Switzerland, regularly since 1981
Vatican, regularly since 1966
Other countries
ECB's Trichet calls for stronger governance
The head of the European Central Bank Jean-Claude Trichet called on Tuesday for stronger economic governance in Europe and paid homage to one of the founding fathers of the euro.
CET time - Central European Time (UTC+01:00)
The current time at Central European Time (CET) with a list of countries, states and cities which use this time zone.
For other countries see UTC+1.
Discrepancies between official CET and geographical CET
Color
Legal time vs local mean time
1 h ± 30 m behind
0 h ± 30 m
1 h ± 30 m ahead
2 h ± 30 m ahead
3 h ± 30 m ahead
European winter
European summer
Since legal, political and economic, in addition to purely physical or geographical, criteria are used in the drawing of time zones, it follows that official time zones do not precisely adhere to meridian lines. The CET (UTC+1) time zone, were it drawn by purely geographical terms, would consist of exactly the area between meridians 7°30′ E and 22°30′ E.
As a result, there are European locales that despite lying in an area with a "physical" UTC+1 time, actually use another time zone (UTC+2 in particular – there are no "physical" UTC+1 areas that employ UTC).
Conversely, there are European areas that have gone for UTC+1, even though their "physical" time zone is UTC (typically), UTC-1 (westernmost Spain), or UTC+2 (e.g. the very easternmost parts of Norway, Sweden, Poland and Serbia). On the other hand the people in Spain still have all work and meal hours one hour later than e.g. France and Germany even if they have the same time zone. Following is a list of such "incongruences":
Historically Gibraltar maintained UTC+1 all year until the opening of the land frontier with Spain in 1982 when it followed its neighbour and introduced CEST.
Areas located within UTC+1 longitudes using other time zones
Areas between 7°30′ E and 22°30′ E ("physical" UTC+1), all using UTC+2
The westernmost part of Greece, including the cities of Patras, Ioannina and the island of Corfu
The westernmost parts of the Bulgarian provinces of Vidin and Kyustendil
The westernmost part of Romania, including most of the area of the counties of Caraş-Severin, Timiş (capital Timişoara), Arad, and Bihor, as well as the westernmost tips of the counties of Mehedinţi and Satu Mare
The westernmost tip of Ukraine, near the border with Hungary and Slovakia, at the Ukrainian Transcarpathian Oblast (Zakarpattia Oblast), essentially comprising the city of Uzhhorod and its environs. (Although CET is used as local, non-official time in Transcarpathia).
The Russian exclave of Kaliningrad, excluding however its easternmost slice (the city of Nesterov is east of 22°30′ E, but that of Krasnoznamensk is not)
Western Lithuania, including the cities of Klaipėda, Tauragė, and Telšiai
Western Latvia, including the cities of Liepāja and Ventspils
The westernmost parts of the Estonian islands of Saaremaa and Hiiumaa, including the capital of the Saare County, Kuressaare
The southwestern coast of Finland, including the city of Turku; also the Åland islands (of Finnish jurisdiction) – the Åland islands are the westernmost locale applying EET in the whole of Europe
The northwesternmost part of Finland, including Kilpisjärvi and Kaaresuvanto.
Areas located outside UTC+1 longitudes using UTC+1 time
Areas between 22°30′ W and 7°30′ W ("physical" UTC-1)
The westernmost part of mainland Spain (Galicia, e.g. the city of A Coruña); Cape Finisterre and nearby points in Galicia, at 9°18′ W, are the westernmost places where CET is applied.
The Norwegian island of Jan Mayen lies entirely within this area and extends nearly as far west as Cape Finisterre, with its western tip at 9°5′ W and its eastern tip at 7°56′ W.
Areas between 7°30′ W and 7°30′ E ("physical" UTC)
Andorra
Belgium
France, except for the absolutely easternmost part, in Alsace, incl. Strasbourg, and except for Corsica
The very westernmost part of Germany, incl. the cities of Saarbrücken, Düsseldorf, Cologne, Aachen, and Trier
The absolutely westernmost part of Italy, incl. the cities of Aosta in Aosta Valley and Cuneo in Piedmont
Luxembourg
Monaco
Netherlands
The westernmost part of Norway, incl. the cities of Bergen and Stavanger
Mainland Spain, except for the westernmost part (see above)
The part of Switzerland west of Bern (inclusive), also incl. cities such as Geneva, Lausanne, and Fribourg
Areas between 22°30′ E and 37°30' ("physical" UTC+2)
The easternmost part of the Republic of Macedonia, including the city of Strumica
The easternmost part of Serbia, in the Pirot District, including the city of Pirot, and small easternmost parts of Bor District.
The easternmost tips of Hungary and Slovakia, bordering to the north and south respectively the Ukrainian Transcarpathian Oblast (Zakarpattia Oblast), a bit to the east of Vásárosnamény, Hungary – Uzhhorod, Ukraine (both at 22°18′ E) line
The easternmost part of Poland, including the cities of Lublin and Białystok
The northeast of Sweden, in the Norrbotten province, including the cities of Kalix and Haparanda
The northeast of Norway, lying north of Finland, roughly coinciding with the county of Finnmark; for instance Vadsø, the capital of Finnmark, has a longitude of 23°49′ E. Actually, the easternmost town in Norway, Vardø, lies at 30°51′ E, which is so far east, so as to be east even of the central meridian of EET (UTC+2), i.e. east of Istanbul and Alexandria. The sun reaches its highest point at 10:56 (when not DST).
The Norwegian-Russian border (incl. border passings such as Kirkenes) is the only place where CET (UTC+1) borders Moscow time (UTC+3), resulting in a two hours time change for the passenger crossing that border.
More so, there exists a "tri-zone" point (where UTC+1, UTC+2, and UTC+3 meet) at the Norway-Finland-Russia tripoint near Nautsi. This is the only "tri-zone" point within Europe. It is interesting to perform the following mental experiment when looking at this map: Go to the westernmost point of the red area (the Jäniskoski-Niskakoski area); this belongs to Russian jurisdiction, hence the time there is UTC+3. Then, take a northeastern (NE) direction (that is an eastwards direction); you will soon be crossing into Finnish territory, thus moving to the UTC+2 time zone. Continuing in that direction, you will eventually reach the Finland-Norway border and enter Norway, thus passing into the UTC+1 time zone. So, moving in a (north–)easterly direction, you will be moving from UTC+3 to UTC+2 to UTC+1.
See also
Time zone
European Summer Time
Amsterdam Time
UTC+1
Other countries and territories in UTC+1 time zone
References
^ Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents
^ Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents Factsheet
^ BBC news website
External links
German Time Act
Dutch Time Act
Trichet calls for stronger governance
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Central European Time: Information from Answers.com
Central European Time the standard time based on the mean solar time at the meridian 15° E, used in central and western continental Europe
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Central European Time - definition of Central European Time ...
Definition of Central European Time in the Online Dictionary. Meaning of Central European Time. Pronunciation of Central European Time. ...
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Irish
Clock showing current time in Central European Time Zone ... Central European Summer Time = GMT+2. To see time in a separate window: CET Time. European ...
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French
Central European Time (CET) Standard Time = GMT+1 Summer Time = GMT+2 ... current time in Central European Time Zone. Central European Time (CET) ...
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CEST time - Central European Summer Time (UTC+02:00)
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ECB's Trichet set for inflation grilling as debt crisis fears abate - for now
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Most shops in Prague are open from 9 00 to 18 00 Monday to Saturday Shops in the city centre are usually open from 9 00 to 20 00 Monday to Sunday Time Zone The Czech Republic is on Central European Time Greenwich Mean Time GMT plus 1 hour From April to October is summer time i e GMT + 2 hours
http://www.pc2010.eu/en/general-information/good-to-know
Central European Time - Definition
Most of them also use Central European Summer Time as a summer daylight saving time. Central European Time used to be also known as Middle European Time (MET) ...
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FOREIGN DEPOSITS with Irish banks declined by 40 per cent during 2010, while the flow of credit to businesses and households continued to dry up in December, new figures from the Central Bank show.
lichens and 38 000 bryophytes During that same period of time Pit authored more than 400 research papers on lichen ecology and diversity from central Europe especially Slovakia This Festschrift contains original contributions by the honoree s close colleagues from Austria Czech Republic Estonia Germany Poland and Slovakia The 21 contributed papers are
http://www.mykoweb.com/book_reviews/CentralEuropeanLichens.html




