Every year on a Saturday evening in late March, something quietly remarkable happens. Across more than 190 countries, the lights of iconic landmarks — the Eiffel Tower, the Sydney Opera House, the Empire State Building — go dark for 60 minutes.
Hundreds of millions of people follow suit in their homes, offices, and communities. Critics invariably ask the same question: does switching off a light for an hour actually change anything?
The answer, perhaps counterintuitively, is yes — though perhaps not quite in the way one might expect.
Impact on energy consumption negligible
The most common objection to Earth Hour is that its material impact on energy consumption is negligible. This is technically true. The electricity saved during one hour on one night is immeasurably small against the scale of global emissions.
Some critics even point out that standby systems, power grid fluctuations, and candle use can partially offset whatever carbon reduction occurs. On pure energy accounting, the numbers are unimpressive.
But this critique fundamentally misunderstands what Earth Hour is. It was never designed to be an emissions reduction strategy. It is, at its core, an act of collective declaration — a globally synchronized moment in which ordinary people signal that they care about the planet.