Overview
- Lawmakers in Rome began examining a motion on November 17 to explore ending twice-yearly clock changes by adopting permanent summer time.
- The review follows a petition with 352,000 signatures and has public backing from the Italian Society for Environmental Medicine.
- The inquiry will evaluate impacts on energy use, the environment, public health, safety and social habits, with proponents citing potential savings of about 720 million kWh and up to €180 million annually.
- Supporters also point to expected gains for retail, hospitality and tourism as well as public safety, while sleep researchers warn that permanent summer time could conflict with human biological rhythms.
- The effort unfolds as the EU’s 2019 vote to end clock changes remains unimplemented, and an Italian MEP cautions that divergent national choices could create cross-border time confusion.