Egypt Standard Time


Egypt Standard Time is, which is exactly the same as Eastern European Time, Central Africa Time and South African Standard Time, and is co-linear with neighboring Libya and Sudan. Egypt has previously used Eastern European Summer Time, during the summer periods from 1957–2010 and 2014–15.

History

On 21 April 2011, the interim government abolished summer time. The standard time was used the whole year round, with no change in summer.
On 7 May 2014, the Egyptian interim government decided to use summer time starting from 15 May 2014, the third Friday of May, with an exception for the holy month of Ramadan. This just comes before the Egyptian presidential elections were expected to start.
On 20 April 2015, The Egyptian government decided not apply summer time this year following a poll that had been held in April 2015 regarding applying DST or not. The government decided to make the necessary amendment to the laws and asked the ministers to work on a study to determine the probability of applying daylight saving time in coming years or not. The ministry of electricity assured that the achieved electricity saving from applying summer time is not of any tangible effect.
On 29 April 2016, the government under Prime Minister Sherif Ismail decided to use summer time again by July 7. It was to begin after Ramadan and last until the end of October. However, it was cancelled on July 4 following a vote by the Egyptian Parliament on June 28 to abolish DST, and to comply with the April 2015 presidential decree to refrain from introducing DST.

Time zone changes

IANA time zone database

The IANA time zone database contains one zone for Egypt in the file zone.tab.
coordinates*TZ*Standard timeSummer time
+3003+03115Africa/Caironot observed