Press review, reference points and resources on the Moroccan mobilization in favor of a return to Greenwich time.
Last update :
04/26/2026
This monitoring page is updated as new articles on legal time in Morocco are identified.
More than 100 documents are listed with their URL links. These are mainly press articles, but also useful links, social media posts, and our own press releases. The list is available at the bottom of the page.
Latest article spotted :
Activists launch platform to coordinate GMT petition campaign in Morocco
— 04/23/2026
ACHED insight :
Legal time in Morocco: why the offshoring sector sticks to GMT+1
— 04/08/2026
This page brings together a selection of articles and resources relating to the mobilization observed in Morocco around the issue of legal time.
From France, ACHED follows this development with particular attention. Morocco provides a remarkable example of a citizen movement advocating a return to the natural time zone in a country that has ended seasonal clock changes, but has been maintained since 2018 on an advanced legal time (GMT+1).
An online Moroccan petition on the Change.org platform has gathered more than 300,000 signatures in less than two months. The initiators highlight the social, psychological and economic impacts of maintaining GMT+1 and call for a structured public debate as well as an institutional response.
A new step was announced in early April: to move this mobilization from a largely informal register to a legally admissible petition within the framework of Morocco’s petition rights.
There has been mention of a paper petition, but also of the possibility of a legally valid online petition via the official Eparticipation portal. At ACHED, we hope this point will be clarified soon.
There is also talk of an appeal to all Moroccans, including those living abroad, particularly in France. The Association notes this point and hopes it will be heard.
For its part, ACHED calls on the French public to renew attention and debate on the issue, not only regarding seasonal clock changes, but also the alignment of legal noon with solar noon.
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Access petitions to end daylight saving time
In France, it is indeed commonly 2:00 pm (legal time) when the sun is at its highest point (solar noon).
Moreover, geographically, Morocco and France have similar solar noon times, and their natural time zone is the same: GMT, also known as the Greenwich time zone and more recently as UTC+0.
This page aims to facilitate access to this information in a dedicated space, making it easier to find, share and index.
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2026-04-23 — MASAITI Amira EL (HESPRESS English - Morocco News) — EN — Web page
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2026-04-21 — Instagram — EN — Web page
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2026-04-21 — HASKOURI Khouloud (HESPRESS English - Morocco News) — EN — Web page
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2026-04-20 — MASAITI Amira EL (HESPRESS English - Morocco News) — EN — Web page
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2026-04-20 — Taouil Khadija (Atalayar) — EN — Web page
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2026-04-17 — EN — Web page
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2026-04-17 — Instagram — EN — Web page
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2026-04-17 — EN — Web page
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2026-04-16 — Facebook — EN — Web page
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2026-04-16 — Instagram — EN — Web page
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2026-04-16 — HASKOURI Khouloud (HESPRESS English - Morocco News) — EN — Web page
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2026-04-16 — msn.com — EN — Web page
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2026-04-14 — linformation.ma — EN — Web page
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2026-04-14 — Instagram — EN — Web page
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2026-04-11 — Instagram — EN — Web page
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2026-04-07 — EN — Web page
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2026-04-03 — HASKOURI Khouloud (HESPRESS English - Morocco News) — EN — Web page
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2026-03-30 — Yabiladi.com — EN — Web page
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2026-03-29 — Kasraoui Safaa — EN — blogPost
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2026-03-25 — Kasraoui Safaa — EN — blogPost
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2026-03-24 — EN — Web page
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2026-03-24 — HASKOURI Khouloud (HESPRESS English - Morocco News) — EN — Web page
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2026-03-24 — qlil omar — EN — blogPost
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2026-03-24 — EN — Web page
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2026-03-22 — Aktitou Aziza — EN — blogPost
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2026-03-21 — EN — Web page
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2026-03-20 — Kasraoui Safaa — EN — blogPost
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2026-03-15 — Instagram — EN — Web page
18.
Hespress English Instagram : "Morocco will return to GMT+1 on Sunday, March 22, 2026, by moving clocks forward 60 minutes at 0200, in line with the country’s legal time decree, the Ministry of Digital Transition and Administration Reform said. The kingdom switched to GMT on Sunday, Feb. 15, at 0300 for Ramadan, under a government order issued on Jan. 29, 2026. Morocco has applied a system since 2018 under which GMT+1 remains the legal time for most of the year, with a temporary return to GMT during the fasting month. The seasonal change has continued to draw criticism online from people who say GMT+1 disrupts daily routines, sleep and health. #Morocco #GMT #Time #CMO #HespressEng" എന്നതിലുണ്ട്
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2026-03-13 — MASAITI Amira EL (HESPRESS English - Morocco News) — EN — Web page
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2026-03-03 — النميطة أحمد — EN — blogPost
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2026-02-24 — EN — Web page
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2026-02-24 — EN — Web page
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2026-02-24 — Yabiladi.com — EN — Web page
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2026-02-24 — Naim Firdaous — EN — blogPost
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2026-02-24 — HASKOURI Khouloud (HESPRESS English - Morocco News) — EN — Web page
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2026-02-23 — EN — Web page
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2026-02-23 — MASAITI Amira EL (HESPRESS English - Morocco News) — EN — Web page
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2026-02-23 — MASAITI Amira EL (HESPRESS English - Morocco News) — EN — Web page
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2026-02-17 — EN — Web page
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2025-10-24 — MASAITI Amira EL (HESPRESS English - Morocco News) — EN — Web page
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2025-02-17 — S.A — EN — Web page
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2024-04-12 — Yabiladi.com — EN — Web page
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2018-11-02 — tarek-bazza — EN — blogPost
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2018-10-18 — EN — Web page
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2008-05-22 — EN — Web page