Eastern European Time
Eastern European Time (EET) is one of the names of UTC+2 time zone, 2 hours ahead of Coordinated Universal Time. It is used in some European, North African, and Middle Eastern countries. Most of them also use Eastern European Summer Time (UTC+3) as a summer daylight saving time.
Image:Time zones of Europe.png
Time zones of Europe: blue - GMT or Western European Time, red - Central European Time, green - Eastern European Time, khaki - Moscow Time.
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Usage
One country uses Eastern European Time all the year:
The following countries and territories use Eastern European Time during the winter only:
- Åland Islands
- Belarus
- Bulgaria
- Cyprus
- Egypt
- Estonia
- Finland
- Greece
- Israel
- Jordan
- Latvia
- Lebanon
- Lithuania
- Moldova
- Palestinian territories
- Romania
- Russia (Kaliningrad)
- Syria
- Turkey
- Ukraine
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