Ukraine introduces earlier sunsets to spite Russia
The Ukrainian parliament has voted in favor of ending Daylight Saving Time starting next year, citing national security concerns. The move will result in awkward hours for residents of eastern regions.
Though Verkhovna Rada chairman Ruslan Stefanchuk had proposed the measure as far back as 2020, it was passed by lawmakers on Tuesday, with 261 deputies voting in favor.
“In the fall, we will switch to winter time and stay on it,” Yevgenia Kravchuk, a senior member of Vladimir Zelensky’s Servant of the People faction, said on Facebook. “No more disruptions of biological rhythms and ‘habits’ by the time change.”
While Kravchuk explained the reasoning in terms of minimizing the inconvenience to Ukrainians, Stefanchuk’s proposal had other priorities.
The change “is intended to ensure the protection of territorial integrity and strengthen the national security of Ukraine, since the aggressor state [Russia] has imposed its time in the temporarily occupied territories,” said the original explanatory note from 2020. “Therefore, the installation and consolidation throughout Ukraine of a single Kiev time, without exception, will strengthen the security position of Ukraine and will contribute to the de-occupation and reintegration of temporarily occupied territories.”
The lawmakers also argued that the move would improve public health and line up with EU integration, while keeping the practice would have no impact on energy conservation.
According to the bill, Ukraine will move its clocks back to winter time on October 27, where they will then stay. While the proposal might be calculated to spite Moscow, it will cause significant problems for residents of Kharkov, Poltava, and Dnepr, in the east of Ukraine.
“Today in Kharkov sunrise is at 04:44, and sunset is at 20:38,” wrote Ukrainian blogger Andrey Sapunov. “After the abolition of daylight saving time, in exactly one year in Kharkov it will dawn at 03:44 and be dark at 19:38.”
The change will make little difference in Uzhgorod, on the border with Slovakia, where dawn would come at 04:46 and dusk at 20:27, according to Sapunov.
Russia tried to introduce permanent “summer time” in 2011, consolidating its 11 time zones into nine. The experiment was quickly abandoned, however, as Russians protested the late sunrises. The country ended up switching to year-round “winter time” in 2014 instead.