The
United Kingdom uses
Greenwich Mean Time (
UTC) and
British Summer Time (
UTC+1).
The UK used
Local Mean Time until railway timetabling gradually established the two standards of Greenwich Mean Time and
Dublin Mean Time (). These were legally adopted in 1880. In 1916, Greenwich Mean Time was introduced to Ireland, and British Summer Time was introduced.
At the beginning of the 20th century
Sandringham Time () was used by the royal household.
The United Kingdom experimentally adopted
Central European Time in the years 1968–71; however, this experiment proved unpopular and short-lived, mainly due to the increased number of road accidents (many involving children walking to school) in the dark winter mornings.
Regulation of time zones and Summer Time is a
reserved matter, meaning that only in the
Parliament of the United Kingdom has power to legislate, rather than devolved administrations such as the
Scottish Parliament.
See also
★
List of time zones
External links
★
History of legal time in Britain
★
Archive of Summer time dates from the National Physical Laboratory