1. Moscow = GMT +3 (or 3PM)
2. Crimea = GMT +4 (or 4 PM)
3. Yekaterinburg = GMT +5
4. Novosibirsk = GMT +6
5. Krasnoyarsk = GMT +7
6. Irkutsk = GMT +8
7. Yakutsk = GMT +9
8. Vladivostok = GMT +10
9. Magadan = GMT +11 (or 11 PM)
10. Petropavlovsk= GMT +12 (or midnight)
Note: The above Russian cities and/or districts are representative of the various time zones across Russia and not the actual names that Russians use for the zones -- except Moscow. There was an 11th zone, before the USSR broke up, the Eastern European Time (EET), which is 2 hours ahead of GMT or GMT +2 - the same as Helsinki, Finland.
There is also another time zone--Kaliningrad in the Baltic Sea, in Eastern European Time--or is it no more?
There are now officially only nine time zones, as of Sunday March 28, 2010 (there were eleven before)
Actually there is 11 different times zones Not 10.
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President Dmitry Medvedev signed a federal law on June 9, 2011 doing away with the semi-annual clock adjustments but keeping clocks advanced year-'round. Russia's nine time zone offsets from UTC since then are +3, +4 (Moscow Time; MSK), +6, +7, +8, +9, +10, +11 & +12.
Here is a guide to time in the Russian Federation:
Russia spans 11 time zones.
Russia has nine time zones spanning two continents.
Russia has 11 time zones due to its vast geographical size, the largest number of any country. These time zones range from UTC+2 to UTC+12, with some regions observing Daylight Saving Time adjustments.
While the six countries in Central Eurasia ( Afghanistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan) all have one time zone each for a total of six. Russia at one time had as many as eleven separate time zones. In 2010, two of the eleven zones were abolished and it currently has nine. So the total of time zones in Russia and Central Eurasia is fifteen.
Russia will have eleven time zones beginning on the 26th of October 2014.
Russia spans 11 time zones.
If you mean time zones. There is one. Russia has 7 time zones.
Russia has nine time zones spanning two continents.
11
There are 11 time zones in Russia.
Russia has 11 time zones due to its vast geographical size, the largest number of any country. These time zones range from UTC+2 to UTC+12, with some regions observing Daylight Saving Time adjustments.
While the six countries in Central Eurasia ( Afghanistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan) all have one time zone each for a total of six. Russia at one time had as many as eleven separate time zones. In 2010, two of the eleven zones were abolished and it currently has nine. So the total of time zones in Russia and Central Eurasia is fifteen.
Russia
Russia will have eleven time zones beginning on the 26th of October 2014.
russia- 11 time zones hope this helps!
True. Russia is the largest country in the world by land area and spans across 11 time zones. When it is noon in Moscow, which is in the UTC+3 time zone, it is indeed 11 pm on Russia's Pacific coast, which is in the UTC+11 time zone.
Which part of Russia? Russia covers a whole lot of different time zones.