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Cuba Continues Daylight Saving Schedule in 2008

Cuba will officially observe daylight saving time at midnight between Saturday and Sunday when the clocks will turn one hour ahead to 1am on March 16, 2008.

Cuba starts Daylight Saving Time on March 16, 2008

Cuba Continues Daylight Saving Schedule in 2008

©iStockphoto.com/Vasko Miokovic

Cuba will officially observe daylight saving time at midnight between Saturday and Sunday when the clocks will turn one hour ahead to 1am on March 16, 2008. Daylight saving time is used as a way to save energy by extending daylight, therefore reducing the need to use artificial lighting.

Supporters of Daylight Saving

Supporters of daylight saving time in Cuba believe that the extra hour of sunlight in the afternoon could counter for potential summer blackouts caused by power plant failures. Blackouts caused by power plant failures have occurred in Cuba’s recent past. In 2004 a thermoelectric power plant suffered a serious malfunction, causing a wave of blackouts of up to 12 hours each day. Other people, including expatriates, have expressed the need for the daylight saving time schedule to remain consistent each year.

Calls to Scrap Daylight Saving

Some Cubans see no benefit in daylight saving and have called for daylight saving time to be scrapped. Some people expressed discomfort with changing their body clocks in synchronization with the daylight saving hours. Others believed that the daylight saving changes did not help save energy. For example, in October 2007 an official from the Cuban Electric Union complained that energy consumption could increase as a result of daylight saving time.

During daylight saving time, Cuba is four hours behind Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) and the same as Eastern Daylight Time in the United States and Canada. Regardless of Cuba’s daylight saving plans in the future, the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base observes daylight saving time in synchronization with their Florida headquarters in the United States.

History

Daylight saving time was first introduced in Cuba in 1928 but it was not widely accepted until World War II. After the war, daylight saving time was no longer observed until 1965. In 2004 Cuba remained on daylight saving time until October 29, 2006. Cuba was in a perpetual state of daylight saving time during that period. After two years operating all year-round without changing from “summer” to "normal" time, Cuba decided to re-establish standard time on October 29, 2006. Cuba again observed daylight saving time in 2007 and plans to stick to the daylight saving time schedule in 2008.

Dates of Daylight Saving Time 1980–2008

These are the dates Daylight Saving Time started and ended in Havana.


YearStart dateEnd dateDaylight duration
197026 Apr25 Oct26 weeks
197125 Apr31 Oct27 weeks
197230 Apr8 Oct23 weeks
197329 Apr8 Oct23 weeks and 1 day
197428 Apr8 Oct23 weeks and 2 days
197527 Apr26 Oct26 weeks
197625 Apr31 Oct27 weeks
197724 Apr30 Oct27 weeks
19787 May8 Oct22 weeks
197918 Mar14 Oct30 weeks
198016 Mar12 Oct30 weeks
198110 May11 Oct22 weeks
19829 May10 Oct22 weeks
19838 May9 Oct22 weeks
19846 May14 Oct23 weeks
19855 May13 Oct23 weeks
198616 Mar12 Oct30 weeks
198715 Mar11 Oct30 weeks
198820 Mar9 Oct29 weeks
198919 Mar8 Oct29 weeks
19901 Apr14 Oct28 weeks
19917 Apr13 Oct27 weeks
19925 Apr11 Oct27 weeks
19934 Apr10 Oct27 weeks
19943 Apr9 Oct27 weeks
19952 Apr8 Oct27 weeks
19967 Apr6 Oct26 weeks
19976 Apr12 Oct27 weeks
199829 Mar25 Oct30 weeks
199928 Mar31 Oct31 weeks
20002 Apr29 Oct30 weeks
20011 Apr28 Oct30 weeks
20027 Apr27 Oct29 weeks
20036 Apr26 Oct29 weeks
2004–2006Sunday, 28 March 2004Sunday, 29 October 2006135 weeks
200711 Mar28 Oct33 weeks
200816 Mar26 Oct32 weeks
20098 Mar25 Oct33 weeks
201014 Mar31 Oct33 weeks
201120 Mar13 Nov34 weeks
20121 Apr4 Nov31 weeks
201310 Mar3 Nov34 weeks
20149 Mar2 Nov34 weeks
20158 Mar1 Nov34 weeks