Clouds over Australia are shown. Credit: NASA

As if 2016 has not been long enough, the year's dying minute will last an extra second to make up for time lost to Earth's slowing rotation, timekeepers say.

Countries that use Coordinated Universal Time—several West African nations, Britain, Ireland and Iceland—will add the leap second during the midnight countdown to 2017—making the year's final minute 61 seconds long.

For others, the timing will be determined by the time zone they live in, relative to UTC.

"This extra second, or leap second, makes it possible to align astronomical time, which is irregular and determined by Earth's rotation, with UTC which is extremely stable and has been determined by atomic clocks since 1967," the Paris Observatory said in a statement.

The observatory houses the International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service (IERS), responsible for synchronising time.

"The sequence of dates of the UTC second markers will be: 2016 December 31 23h 59m 59s, 2016 December 31 23h 59m 60s, 2017 January 1, 0h 0m 0s," the IERS website states.

The adjustment is necessary because Earth's rotation is not regular—it sometimes speeds up, sometimes slows down, but is gradually slowing overall.

This is caused by factors including the Moon's gravitational Earth-braking forces, which give rise to the ocean tides.

The result is that astronomical time—based on the length of an Earth day— gradually falls out of sync with atomic time—which is measured by nearly 400 super-accurate atomic clocks dotted around the world.

Leap year, too

Atomic time or TAI, in turn, is used to determine UTC, used for civil timekeeping globally.

TAI is exactly 36 seconds ahead of UTC, a difference that keeps growing as leap seconds are added, and will reach 37 seconds on January 1.

When leap seconds were introduced in 1972, 10 seconds had to be added to UTC, followed by another roughly every 18 months thereafter, according to the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) of the US Department of Commerce.

The last was added on June 30, 2015.

"Leap seconds are added in order to keep the difference between UTC and astronomical time (UT1) to less than 0.9 seconds," the NIST website explains.

"Usually leap seconds are added when UTC is ahead of UT1 by 0.4 seconds or more."

The process, it added, can create problems for data logging applications and telecommunications systems.

"Special attention must be given to these systems each time there is a leap second."

2016 has also had a leap day—February 29—a four-yearly occurrence to keep the calendar synchronised with Earth's movement around the Sun.

Explore further 2016 will be one second longer

© 2016 AFP