Geothermalman
 New Member
 Posts:53
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| 16 Dec 2008 11:38 AM |
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Just wondering what KW's are costing others across the country. I figure mine my dividing total bill in dollars by total KW used.
Long Island, NY (Long Island Power Authority... LIPA) .21 cents/ kw. |
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thevinmanfxst
 New Member
 Posts:36
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| 16 Dec 2008 11:58 AM |
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New Milford, CT (Connecticut Light and Power...CL&P) .18 cents/kw Here is some interesting info: Link |
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geodean
 Veteran Member
 Posts:1169
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| 16 Dec 2008 12:32 PM |
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We pay $.075 / kwh in Utah. If you add in the taxes and fees, then $.089
RockyMountainPower |
Attachment: ScreenHunter_31.jpg
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Dewayne Dean www.PalaceGeothermal.com Why settle for 90% when you can have 400% We heat and cool with dirt! visit- http://welserver.com/WEL0114/- to see my system |
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kiphorn
 New Member
 Posts:39
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| 16 Dec 2008 01:48 PM |
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Here in central PA where I have Adams Electric Co-Op as my supplier I'm paying about .082/kw including all the fees. |
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Kip Horn
Tranquility 27 (June 2008) |
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Geothermalman
 New Member
 Posts:53
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| 16 Dec 2008 03:40 PM |
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LIPA charges customers a fuel cost surcharge of 10.3 cents per KW in addition to the .075 per KW They dont call it a rate hike so they can avoid going thru the public service commision.
Lovely |
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Brock
 Advanced Member
 Posts:505

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| 16 Dec 2008 04:36 PM |
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With the added "fuel" charges we are $.058 off peak (noon to 4p and 9p to 8a) and just about $.22 on peak. The regular flat rate is just over $.11. |
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| Green Bay, WI. - 4 ton horizontal, 16k gallon indoor pool, 1.8kw solar PV setup, 3400 sq ft |
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183eej
 Basic Member
 Posts:124
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| 16 Dec 2008 05:36 PM |
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In Texas, we can choose our retail electric provider and rates are running anywhere from 10 cents to 18 cents per kWh right now. All rates are flat and you can go with a month to month contract where the rates float depending on market conditions all the way to locking yourself into a 5 year contract. Average rate though is between 13 and 14 cents per kWh. |
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Dale Walker EarthTap www.earthtapenergy.com Where the sun never sets on energy savings
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silversurf
 New Member
 Posts:11
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| 16 Dec 2008 05:41 PM |
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Seattle, Washington area (25 mi east of Seattle actually), under Puget Sound Energy, non-peak is $0.08 and $0.10 peak/over. We have all hydro and wind source power from BPA (a lot of which is sold to other states like CA) so it's cheap for peak here. |
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arkieoscar
 New Member
 Posts:44
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| 16 Dec 2008 11:14 PM |
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North Arkansas- Entergy $.108 per kwh. Used 479kwh for Nov.=16kwh/day. All electric, heating 2800 sq.ft. Averaged 18 kwh per day for the first 11 months this year. I do go around turning out CF lights. |
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engineer
 Veteran Member
 Posts:1492
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| 16 Dec 2008 11:23 PM |
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Most of Florida is in the range of 9-12 cents per kwh.
DOE has some national maps showing rates for every state |
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Curt Kinder
Absent data, you have only an opinion.
www.hoviscustombuilders.com
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mckinlay
 New Member
 Posts:19
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| 16 Dec 2008 11:43 PM |
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Point your browser to
http://www.eia.doe.gov/fuelelectric.html
The map while crude by google standards tells an interesting story... |
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TechGromit
 Advanced Member
 Posts:535
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| 17 Dec 2008 10:46 PM |
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It's difficult to determine an exact rate, since there all different charges. A customer charge, distrubution rate, transmission rate along with a dozen other minor chrages, not to mention different rates for Summer vs. Winter charge. but if I Divide my bill vs. how much power I used last month, I come up with 14.5 cent per KWH.
This is for South Jersey, Atlantic City Electric. |
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Ona
 Basic Member
 Posts:173
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| 18 Dec 2008 08:32 AM |
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I also used TechGromit's approach (divide the entire bill by KWH) and I pay ~ 10.8 cents per KWH.
I'm just west of Albany, NY (North Greenbush) and my electric provider is New York State Electric & Gas (NYSEG). |
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Ona just trying to make my old home better www.geochoices.com |
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retiredeng
 New Member
 Posts:9
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| 18 Dec 2008 08:47 AM |
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I live in SW New Hampshire and here are my numbers from different sources:
EIA - State Electricity Profiles: 13.84 cents/KWH
New Hampshire Office of Energy and Planning: 16.46 cents/KWH
My actual bill for November: 18.37 cents/KWH
Trust but verify. ~ Russian proverb
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Farmboy
 Basic Member
 Posts:273
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| 18 Dec 2008 10:52 AM |
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South central Kansas, between Wichita and the Oklahoma border.
Local electric coop for our rural property, doesn't generate own power, buys and distributes from Westar:
Power cost is 10.7 cents/kwh...October consumption was 238 kwh's, w/taxes/surcharges etc. 20.2 cents/kwh
In city of Wellington which has a power plant that is used as backup and to generate electricity when cheaper than buying it.
Power cost is 7.06 cents/kwh...October consumption was 159 kwh's, w/taxes/surcharges etc. 17.7 cents/kwh
If we consumed more KWH our monthly actual cost/KWH would reduce as the "other" charges would be spread over more KWH's.
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Neverendz
 New Member
 Posts:8
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| 18 Dec 2008 11:21 AM |
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.17 kw/hr here in cloudy West Deptford NJ. BGS Energy.
, Bill |
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pyropaul99
 New Member
 Posts:39
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| 22 Dec 2008 09:59 AM |
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Taking the total annual bill and dividing it by the kWh supplied gives me Can$0.07 per kWh inclusive of tax and standing charges. This is for 18330kWh.
I'm in Montreal, Quebec and we're pretty much 100% hydroelectric here.
Paul |
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Eric D
 Basic Member
 Posts:101
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| 22 Dec 2008 01:01 PM |
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Wow! I didn't realize how much the cost of electricity varies from location to location. Here in Southern Michigan, I'm paying 11¢ per kWh for normal home electricity and with time of day meter, for the geothermal unit and supporting equipment, like the well and water heater, the rate is 6¢ per kWh. During the summer the time if day metered electricity is 9¢ during the day and 6¢ during the evening hours. These values take into account taxes and all other fees. I just divide the bill total by the total kWh used. |
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Eric D Southern Michigan |
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Habeed
 New Member
 Posts:13
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| 01 Jan 2009 11:51 PM |
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Wow! Energy conserving technologies like geothermal and solar thermal make a lot more sense when you have to pay more like 15 centers per kWh. |
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jvk
 New Member
 Posts:26
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| 03 Jan 2009 10:20 AM |
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In south east PA PECO is the supplier.
~$ 0.147/Kwhr during heating season ~$0.147/Kwhr for first 600 kwhr and then $0.167 /Kwhr beyond that during cooling season.
If you go all electric, then PECO gives you a rebate above 600 Kwhr used during the heating season. You then pay $0.077 /Kwhr beyond the 600 Kwhr.
Regards,
VK |
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