How Much do you Pay per Kilowatt Hour of Electricity?
Ultra-Nexus
Buenos Aires, ARG
I´d like to know what are the baseline (in USD) that people pay per killowatt so as to figure out the differences between countries.
Mine is like 0.0129 per Kwatt in Argentina.
Mine is like 0.0129 per Kwatt in Argentina.
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Dang! That sounds expensive! Are you sure?
All figures rated in USD ¢/kwh. Thank you, OPEC.
I wonder how much it costs in Europe...
BTW, what are your average consumption in Kwatts per month?
It's really impractical to do a currency exchange, but if you did, we would currently be paying around 4c per kilowatt hour in dollar terms.
DWR Generation
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Ongoing CTC
DWR Bond Charge
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Trust Transfer Amount
Taxes and Other
It is very confusing in California because although my bill is from one company I actually pay a few different sources for my power at different rates.
All taxes, fees, and generation costs included I pay 12.9 cents per kWH and I average 6kWH per day.
Residential:
First 1300 kWh $0.09174 per kilowatt-hour (9 US Cents/kWh)
$5.65 facility charge per month
Summer: 48.4789 cents
Winter: 27.5826 cents
Mine was:
Summer: 48.4789 cents
Winter: 27.5826 cents
On those rates you can probably by a small folding farm at year´s end with the same money it costs to power everything up.
Daxx
works out to ~$.0565 / kWh in USD.
Our household is burning about 1000kWhr/mo
Right now our fuel adjustment offsets the base charge, almost.
The electrical portion of my bill runs $100-150/mo depending on hte weather and who is at home.
One thing that the IEA numbers don't reflect is the seasonal variations. Here summer power is only about $0.01/kWhr higher.
When we lived in OK winter rates were $0.06/kWhr and summer was $0.14/kWhr
Power rates are closely tied to peak demand usage, so you're somewhat right about the A/C part. Overall, it really comes down to a matter of simple economics, though.
All US (and many, if not all, Canadian) power plants are tied into a number of power "grids". During times of slow demand only the most efficient (read: cheaper to operate) plants are operating at anywhere near full capacity. As demand increases, less-efficient plants are brought up to speed. At times of extremely high demand (say during a Summer heat wave), even the most expensive plants will be running full-tilt.
When I lived in the Washington, DC area, at times of low demand it was more likely that my electricity was coming from Niagara Falls - hundreds of miles away - than it was from the ancient coal-fired Pepco plant a few miles down the road. One of the projects I was involved with when I was a Building Engineer was to implement a load-shedding program for all our HVAC equipment. It basically powered off the heat or A/C to various parts of the building on a rotating basis. By lowering peak demand usage we got a break on our electric rates.
Residential rates are tied more to regulatory practices than to any perceived "greed" on the part of the utility companies. They are pretty much guaranteed a steady amount of business which increases with the population. They'd just as soon charge us a more reasonable rate year in, year out, while discouraging the types of uses that might make demand increase substantially, forcing them to spring really big bucks to expand their power plant or have to build a new one altogether.
Local differences are also generally due to different tax structures in the various states. Last time I looked, Texas had no personal Income Tax. You can bet that the politicians are going to make up the difference somewhere.
I see those 1000w PSUs :wow2: available in the marked and I still can not understand, again, considering the high electricity operational costs, people still buying them. Something similar to the "8V SUV for going shopping" thing going on in America.
Read this:
http://www.short-media.com/forum/showthread.php?t=51447