Timekeepers to Vote on Leap Hour in October as 30% Negative Leap-Second Risk Looms
Updated
Updated · Gizmodo · Jul 9
Timekeepers to Vote on Leap Hour in October as 30% Negative Leap-Second Risk Looms
2 articles · Updated · Gizmodo · Jul 9
Summary
October’s CGPM meeting will vote on replacing leap seconds with a leap hour, accelerating a decision that had been due by 2035.
A 30% risk of needing a negative leap second if authorities wait until 2035 has raised urgency, after Earth’s rotation began running unusually fast from 2016 onward.
July 4, 2024 set a record-short day at 1.66 milliseconds faster than normal, and experts say UTC could require a negative leap second as early as 2029.
Leap seconds were introduced in 1972 to keep UTC aligned with astronomical time, but they have caused technical problems in GPS, communications and banking systems, including a Cloudflare DNS failure tied to a 2017 leap second.
A leap hour would widen the adjustment margin and happen far less often, giving high-precision system operators more time to prepare for timekeeping changes.