Daylight saving time in Brazil explained

Brazil observed daylight saving time (DST) (called horário de verão – "summer time" – in Portuguese) in the years of 1931–1933, 1949–1953, 1963–1968 and 1985–2019. Initially it applied to the whole country, but from 1988 it applied only to part of the country, usually the southern regions, where DST is more useful due to a larger seasonal variation in daylight duration.[1]

The most recent DST rule specified advancing the time by one hour during the period from 00:00 on the first Sunday in November to 00:00 on the third Sunday in February (postponed by one week if the latter fell on carnival), applicable only to the South, Southeast and Central-West regions. Brazil abolished DST in 2019.[1]

List of DST observances

year DST start DST end class=unsortable colspan=27 areas observing DST
1931–1932 colspan=27
1932–1933 colspan=27
1949–1950 colspan=27
1950–1951 colspan=27
1951–1952 colspan=27
1952–1953 colspan=27
1963–1964 colspan=4
colspan=27
1964–1965 colspan=27
1965–1966 colspan=27
1966–1967 colspan=27
1967–1968 colspan=27
1985–1986 colspan=27
1986–1987 colspan=27
1987–1988 colspan=27
1988–1989 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4 colspan=9
1989–1990 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4 colspan=9
1990–1991 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
1991–1992 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
1992–1993 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
1993–1994 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
1994–1995 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
1995–1996 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
1996–1997 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
1997–1998 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
1998–1999 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
1999–2000 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4 colspan=9
2000–2001 rowspan=3 colspan=3 rowspan=3 colspan=4 rowspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=9 rowspan=3
rowspan=2
2001–2002 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4 colspan=9
2002–2003 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
2003–2004 colspan=3 colspan=4
2004–2005 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
2005–2006 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
2006–2007 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
2007–2008 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
2008–2009 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
2009–2010 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
2010–2011 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
2011–2012 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
2012–2013 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
2013–2014 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
2014–2015 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
2015–2016 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
2016–2017 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
2017–2018 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
2018–2019 colspan=3 colspan=4 colspan=4
AC
North

Starting and ending dates

DST starting and ending dates were variable and determined by decree, often set for only one year at a time. Until 1968, the starting date was usually the first day of November or December, and the ending date was usually the first day of March or April, without regard to the day of the week. In 1985–1987 the dates were Saturdays, and from 1987 they were usually Sundays, typically from October to February.[1]

The dates were sometimes adjusted to avoid conflicts with certain events. In 1997, the DST starting date was set to a Monday due to the Pope's mass on Sunday during his visit to Brazil.[2] In 2002, 2004 and 2006, the starting date was postponed to the first Sunday or holiday in November due to elections in October and technical difficulties in adjusting the internal clocks of electronic voting machines.[3] [4] [5] In 2007, the DST ending date was postponed to the Sunday after carnival due to the expected economic benefits of observing DST during that holiday.[6]

In 2008, a decree finally fixed the DST schedule for future years, starting on the third Sunday in October and ending on the third Sunday in February, with an exception for postponing the ending date to the following Sunday if the date would otherwise fall on carnival, which occurred in 2012 and 2015.[1] [7]

In 2018, the starting date was changed to the first Sunday in November to avoid interfering with elections in October. This time there was no technical difficulty, but a desire to shorten the difference in poll closing times between regions with and without DST.[8] Although it was a permanent change to the DST schedule, it was only observed that year as Brazil abolished DST altogether in 2019.[1]

Time changes were almost always done at midnight. The time was advanced from 00:00 to 01:00 on the DST starting date and reduced from 00:00 on the ending date to 23:00 of the previous day. Exceptions were the first DST starting time in 1931 (11:00) and the ending times in 1950 and 1966 (01:00).[1]

Regional application

Until 1988, in every year that DST was observed it applied to whole country. In 1963 the Southeast region started DST earlier than the rest of the country.[1]

From 1988, DST was typically limited to the South, Southeast and Central-West regions, and was occasionally extended to some other states such as Bahia and Tocantins.[1] In 2000, DST was extended to all states in the Northeast region but was quickly canceled in most of them due to strong local opposition.[9]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Decrees on daylight saving time in Brazil. National Observatory of Brazil. 2019-11-25. pt.
  2. https://www1.folha.uol.com.br/fsp/1997/8/27/cotidiano/40.html Daylight saving time ends 15 February
  3. https://www1.folha.uol.com.br/fsp/cotidian/ff1709200225.htm Electoral calendar
  4. https://diariodonordeste.verdesmares.com.br/editorias/negocios/horario-de-verao-comeca-no-dia-2-de-novembro-1.444735 Daylight saving time starts on the 2nd of November
  5. https://www.camara.leg.br/radio/programas/276017-eleicoes-adiam-horario-de-verao-para-novembro---02-16--- Elections postpone daylight saving time to November
  6. http://www.sindestado.com.br/noticias/2006/11.%20novembro%20de%202006/03112006_horario_verao.htm Daylight saving time starts at midnight of this Saturday
  7. https://www.timeanddate.com/news/time/brazil-dst-2008-2009.html Brazil confirms daylight saving from 2008 onwards
  8. http://agenciabrasil.ebc.com.br/politica/noticia/2018-09/eleicoes-mudam-o-inicio-do-horario-de-verao Elections change the start of daylight saving time
  9. https://www1.folha.uol.com.br/folha/cotidiano/ult95u12374.shtml Decree removes the Northeast, except Bahia, from daylight saving time