Venezuela moves forward time zone 30 min to save power
AFP on April 16, 2016, 3:49 am

Caracas (AFP) - Venezuela will shift its time zone forward 30 minutes in order to save electricity and ease a power shortage caused by drying of its hydroelectric dams, a minister said Friday.
On May 1 the country will turn the clock forward to four hours behind Greenwich Mean Time, from four-and-a-half hours currently, said Science and Technology Minister Jorge Arreaza.
That will effectively lengthen the hours of daylight.
It is the latest measure taken to cope with an electricity shortage due to low water levels blamed on the El Nino weather phenomenon.
President Nicolas Maduro on Thursday also declared this Monday a public-sector holiday in a further measure to save energy.
He had last week given the public sector every Friday off until June 6.
The government says the nation's 18 hydroelectric dams have been hit by drought. The opposition accuses it of failing to invest in the water system to keep up with demand.
He said the Monday holiday would create an "electricity-saving long weekend."
With Monday April 18 off, and Tuesday April 19 already an annual holiday marking Venezuela's independence, public sector employees will effectively get a five-day weekend.
Venezuela has the world's largest proven oil reserves, but the government has resisted using crude to generate electricity, calling it inefficient.
Maduro has cut the workday to six hours for ministries and state companies and ordered them to lower their electricity consumption by 20 percent.
He has also ordered shops and hotels to ration electricity, obliging them to generate their own power for several hours a day.
Shopping centers have cut back their hours since that plan was introduced.