Still unknown is the time, the decision is made these days

At the end of the week, analyses will be released that will help institutions decide whether we country will remain in force of summer and night days, or the clock will change at the end of the month. Economy Minister Kreshnik Bektesh said the decision will be made after reviewing the analyses made [...]
Economy Minister Kreshnik Bekteshi said the decision will be made after the analyses made by this dictatorship are considered. Reviewing this possibility comes after the Government estimates that the summer hour's release will help save electricity. Winter hour begins from the last weekend of October, which turns clockwise one hour back.
My opinion is not important. The important thing is what analysis will show in order to have a positive effect. Business as well as citizens. Tests are already under way, and the results will likely be known by the end of the week. The decision should then be made by the end of the month, as predicted by law”, said Kreshnik Bekteshi- Minister of Economy.
Prime Minister Kovachevski said that when the decision on whether the summer or winter hour will remain in place except tests will be considered, even time calculations in neighbouring countries will be taken into account.
“We also analyse our proximity to the time zone of neighbours -- that is, Greece and Bulgaria -- that is, in implementing time calculations on us visas other countries that have the same way of measuring time as we do, but they are much more west and the day lasts longer to them”, said Dimitar Kovacevski- prime minister of the RMV.
The remaining summer count of time means that in the winter months dawn will be an hour later, but the day will last longer, so instead of beginning to darken, for example, at 4: 00 a.m., it will be dark at 5: 00 p.m. The debate over the removal of winter and summer clocks opened by the European Commission four years ago. A survey conducted in that period showed that some 83 percent of EU residents claimed they were “pro” for removing this way of calculating day by night, after which the EC submitted an official proposal to the European Parliament, which approved it in 2019. Hence, the removal should have been applied from last year, where each member state should choose which time system it will maintain. In practice, however, this did not happen.












