Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says her government will consult on doing away with twice-a-year clock changes.

And she says if a switch is made, she would prefer going to permanent daylight time.
Smith says she believes if you asked people if they want to stop changing their clocks, the question would likely get overwhelming support.
“We are on daylight eight months of the year, so going to standard 12 months of the year would be a big adjustment for people,” Smith said on Thursday.
“I kind of like more sunlight at night, and I think most people do, too.”
Premier Danielle Smith says she prefers more sunlight at night and that moving to standard time would be a big adjustment.
Adds that she will be doing consultation to see if the time is now to make a change. pic.twitter.com/gyenlxkyYC
— Courtney Theriault (@cspotweet) March 5, 2026
Story continues below advertisement
Her comments come as British Columbians prepare to spring their timepieces forward this Sunday for one final time as that province adopts year-round Pacific daylight time.
Smith has said with Saskatchewan’s use of year-round central standard time, B.C.’s shift raises questions about whether Alberta should aim for consistency across the western provinces.
Almost five years ago, a referendum question was put to Albertans to keep daylight time year-round, but it failed by the narrowest of margins — 50.2 per cent to 49.8 per cent.
More on Canada
More videos
That, despite the results of a public survey released by the Alberta government in the spring of 2020, in 91 per cent of the 141,000 Albertans who weighed in said they’d like to stop changing their clocks twice a year and stick with DST.

Get daily National news
Get the day’s top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day.
That 2021 ballot offered only one option: “Do you want Alberta to adopt year-round daylight saving time, which is summer hours, eliminating the need to change our clocks twice a year?”
Smith said Thursday the question was “a little double-barrelled” and confusing.
She said she believes if you simply asked people if they want to stop changing their clocks, that would likely get overwhelming support.
Yukon moved their clocks ahead for the last time, switching to permanent daylight saving time following a wildly popular public consultation. B.C is following suit.
Story continues below advertisement
Smith said she’s recently talked to the premier of Northwest Territories and there’s support to ditch the switch there as well.
“It could just be that Alberta was a little early in asking that question, so we’ll be doing some consultation now to see is now is the time for us to consider it,” she said at an unrelated announcement in Cochrane Thursday.
According to the Pew Research Center, only about a third of the world’s countries follow daylight saving time. The vast majority of them are in Europe.
In Canada, Saskatchewan was the lone daylight saving time holdout, with only a few border communities making the seasonal change.
The topic has long been debated in Alberta.
The province adopted daylight time in 1971 after a referendum on the subject passed with 61.5 per cent of voters in favour, only four years after 51 per cent of Albertans voted against the move.
Since then, politicians across the spectrum have periodically petitioned for changes.
Patricia Lakin-Thomas, a biology professor at York University, said in an interview earlier this week that if Alberta does scrap the twice-yearly time changes, it should stick with standard time.
Having permanent daylight time would mean Alberta trades sunlight in the morning for more sunlight in the evening, which Lakin-Thomas said goes against our biological clocks.
Story continues below advertisement
“The best co-ordination is when our social clock, that is the clock on the wall, says noon when the sun is the highest in the sky,” she said.
“When that happens, we are closest to being able to wake up around dawn if we follow the normal kind of workday that our society has decided is normal for us in our industrialized society.”
Lakin-Thomas said she was confident that after the first winter of daylight time, many in B.C. and Alberta — if it follows suit — will want the old system back after growing tired of extra dark mornings.
She also said permanent daylight time has proven to be trouble for some with depression, major depression and bipolar disorder, as studies have indicated morning sunlight can help reduce symptoms.
The annual jump to daylight timing has also been known to increase car accidents, heart attacks and strokes, Lakin-Thomas said.
Clocks “spring ahead” this Sunday at 2 a.m.

1:45
Should Albertans follow B.C.’s lead and stop doing a time change?
— With files from Karen Bartko and Amy Judd, Global News
© 2026 The Canadian Press