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THE Home Gas/Electric Bill Thread (merged)

How to save energy through both societal and individual actions.

Re: Four Digit Electric Bills

Unread postby tsakach » Thu 11 May 2006, 12:35:29

I have an Avanti refrigerator which is the second most efficient according to energy star and other consumer ratings. The highest rating is the Sunfrost. But at $2300 for the Sunfrost vs $370 for the Avanti, why not just purchase more solar panels with the extra cash?
Here is a comparison of refrigerators:
American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy: The Most Energy-Efficient Appliances 2005

I also have a SpinX which works well, but can only handle a small load of clothes at a time. The SpinX sounds like a jet engine winding up, and at full speed you feel like backing away from it in horror. But the laundry comes out slightly damp and dries quickly. The water extracted from the clothes is a nasty looking grey sludge. With conventional washing equipment, this stuff is dried into your clothes and remains there.

While the SpinX uses a fraction of the energy compared to conventional equipment, the clothes washer I have is one of the most amazing, energy-efficient innovations available. It does not need electricity, uses only a little hot water, soap and manual effort and it cleans a small load of laundry in a few minutes.

Image
Pressure Handwasher
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Re: Four Digit Electric Bills

Unread postby Frozen-Stick » Thu 11 May 2006, 14:02:02

I'm using about 4-5kWh per day =1460-1825kWh a year:

Small camping refrigerator (~50W on average during the day = 438kWh/y), a PC with 350MHz (~100W) and sometimes my notebook (~30W), TV is ~80W (few hours a day, every night with hifi i'm disconnecting the plug because 23W when switched off), a small cooking device with two cooking plates, an electric kettle (2000W, ~1min/day), toaster (900W, sometimes used), lights for evening (~240W), central heating is powered by liquefied propane and butane (=LNG?), insulation in the upper floor is very bad (the insulation of the roof is quite good, but the walls have almost no insulation)=> quite cold in the winter even with central heating.

I'm paying 30€/month (~39$), 18,6 €-Ct/kWh as electric bill (Green current company which uses only hydro, solar and natural gas power in heat and power combined plants), the heating bill is included in the extra charges (i think about 40€/month). The (net) ground area of my appartement is 56m^2 (more ground area because of the inclined roof).

An idea for people with no possibility for drying clothes outside:
What about building a small hut with a big front of glass to the south, thick and insulated walls and roof with small crannies in the upper end of the north-sided wall and other small crannies in the lower end of the south-sided wall for creating a small circulation of air. Inside you have several lines for dropping the clothes.
The hut can be secured by a lock or even attached to the house (it's sometimes ugly to go out in winter).

Another idea for the frigerator:
Perhaps it is possible to construct an inlet and an outlet to and from the frige to an outer wall. So in winter you can use the cold air for cooling. You need only a small fan.
In the summer someone could use cold air from the cellar.
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Re: Four Digit Electric Bills

Unread postby pea-jay » Fri 12 May 2006, 03:26:20

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Barbara', '
')
Heating: public network methane; hotwater: methane (tankless-endless hotwater); oven: methane. No drier. No AC.
(about 90% population here the same)

Methane bill: about € 100 per month.

But when Putin close the pipeline we pay less :lol:.


Ah, that explains it. In my house, both are electric units, and the water heater a tank model, which means I am keeping water hot even if I am not going to use it four hours. Wasteful, but unfortunately I don't own this place and wont replace the unit. The heater also is the most inefficient type, blowing through 11.5KW per HOUR. Fortunately our winters are mild enough, and the house insulated, I use the thing less than an hours worth per day. Again, I would replace it with a geothermal heat pump if I had my way, or perhaps a modern pellet stove. I do have an electric dryer though. My airconditioning unit is one of those hyper efficient water based models. (I simply open the windows and get the ocean breeze. It's 200M away.)
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Re: Four Digit Electric Bills

Unread postby pea-jay » Fri 12 May 2006, 04:38:25

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gg3', 'J')ust got my latest electric bill. 265 KWH for a period of 29 days between meter readings. Total bill including gas, $60.24.


Do you have an itemized break out or better yet, a per KWH rate? I know when I still lived in the Golden State, the gas portion of my bill went up and down like a roller coaster, while the elec component eased up over time. My last months bill was two bucks cheaper than your, for elec only (around 800KW I think). No gas.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gg3', ' ')Re. the clothes dryer.

Look up "spin dryers" on shopping.yahoo.com. What these are: a high-speed centrifuge that handles about 5 lbs. of laundry at a time, at 3200 rpm, takes about five minutes per load, and reduces time in the heated tumble-dryer by about half.

...

Or you can get the same results with a twin-tub washer (in the US, Danby DTT-420), which has a high-speed spinner unit and is also probably the most energy-efficient washer anywhere, at about 10 to 20 watt-hours (yes, watt-hours) per pound of laundry (e.g. 0.06 to 0.12 KWH for a 6-lb load, the higher figure for "sanitize" cycles using bleach & an extra rinse). This costs only $300 plus shipping, can be bought on the internet if you can't find it locally.


Another easy way to save is not to use any hot water. I stopped using hotwater and noticed the difference REAL quickly. The high speed spinn sounds pretty cool. Does anyone know if there is long term harm to fabric (of any kind) from that amount of force? Or am I unnecessarily worrying about that. I metered my conventional washer and discovered it used less than a third of a KWH for a full load, full length cycle. With cold water, that works out to about 2 cents a load with my electricity rates around here. The savings would not pencil out on a more efficient washer. A spin dryer on the other hand may pay back much faster. Since my dryer is 240, I cant meter it, but I have read around that they burn up over 5KWH per load. I'll believe it too. The dang cord is as thick as a garden hose. If I stay in this house over the summer, I might fork out the 10-15 bucks to mount a clothes line in the back. In the winter I recapture the dryer heat. On laundry days, the main heat runs less.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gg3', 'R')e. the fridge:

In the US, 600 KWH/year is now considered pretty typical for a standard size fridge.


That's about where mine is. When it runs it only draws around 150W or so. Over time and an average number of openings in my household (including the five year old's knack for opening it and staring for what seems like forever) it uses around 1.5KWH per day. About as advertised... Interestingly enough, on grocery shopping/fridge clean out day, it used an additional .25KWH to chill everything down (after both doors where open for about 8 minutes total for unloading/cleaning/loading).

I want to get one of those efficient Chest freezer and do what this guy in australia did and convert it to a chest refridgerator to really whack at the bills. I think, if I got a pair of those (small sized), converted one, I would still use less electricity than a single unit model. Plus I could turn off one, if seasonally cold weather permitted me to utilize outside cold air for refrigeration or I just didnt have anything warrenting freezer use.

http://www.treehugger.com/files/2005/07 ... fits_f.php

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gg3', 'T')he next thing to tackle is the stove and the oven.

Conventional electric ranges use from 500 to 2,500 watts for each of the heating elements on the stove, and typically 4,500 watts for the oven. Even if these things are only used for a short period of time each day, they are still a large power drain if you're using off-grid power. We're not exactly certain of the approach we want to take to deal with this, though we were saying the same thing when we started on the fridge project. So, we'll see what happens...


My small elements use 1325W at 240V. Somewhere on the net there is a way I can turn that into a KWH based on my usage. I have no idea on my main oven. I have a smaller rotissery/toaster/convection oven that sits on my counter top and only needs a standard 120V outlet. That thing uses only 815W to broil, toast or rotissery at full power and increases to 1500W for oven use (on both convection and standard modes). THe oven space and elements are smaller on this oven, so I know it uses less electricity and cheaper to run than the range oven. I just dont know how much cheaper. My coffee maker needs a remarkably small 1/3 of a KWH to brew a pot of coffe (gotta turn off the heating plate right after though), but the award for cheap heat goes to the microwave. Two minutes is all I need to bring one coffe cup of cold tap water to tea or hot chocolate temperatures, in the process consuming a miniscule .02KWH of electricty. That barely registers in my meter.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Frozen-Stick', 'P')erhaps it is possible to construct an inlet and an outlet to and from the frige to an outer wall. So in winter you can use the cold air for cooling. You need only a small fan.
In the summer someone could use cold air from the cellar.


Popular mechanics had an article about a guy that turned his back porch into a refrigerator during the winter utilizing thermostats and a few fans no more powerful than a computer fan. As for using basement air, I don't think it is cold enough to properly refrigerate certain products. It would work for root cellar storage though.
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Re: Four Digit Electric Bills

Unread postby mommy22 » Fri 12 May 2006, 09:43:58

I love that pressure hand washer! That's one thing that I worry about, as we, too, live in a 100% electric house that we (and the bank, for a few more years) own....that the electricity goes down and life would get a bit hard. My mother's day present to me!
I also noticed a reduction in our electric bill after I started conscienciously pulling the plug out whenever it was not in use. DH was not so excited about the idea of plugging in the toaster every morning, but after he saw the difference in usage( and the bill go down)he was on board. Apparently, if the electical item has a heating element to it, that's what sucks up the most electricity. The rep from our power and Light group in Ohio said that girls who keep their curling irons and such plugges in really use a lot of energy. As far as hanging clothes, why is it such a problem to hang your clothes indoors? I've been doing that for years. It takes about 24 hours to dry(less if you put the rack near a heater). I've got a family of 4 and do about 5-6 loads a week. I try to hang out 2-3 loads at one time so it all comes dry at the same time. I do use the dryer for 1-2 loads, and try to wash (and therefore dry) back to back to save on the heating startup. I use cold water for everything except whites and towels.
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Re: Four Digit Electric Bills

Unread postby gg3 » Fri 12 May 2006, 09:50:55

Re. Tsakach:

As the cost of PV panels comes down, SunFrost will have to reduce their price to remain competitive:-). I think what they're counting on now in their business model is the tradeoff between the cost of their fridge and the cost of adding more PVs.

SpinX: Yes, sounds like a jet engine; but so does a vacuum cleaner and you don't back away in horror whilst vacuuming, eh?:-). The small load size is necessary otherwise the unit has to become much larger & heavier to have enough mass to stay put rather than vibrating & inching its way across the floor.

WonderClean: Yes, I tried that during my "manual laundry" experiments. Works quite well if used properly; load capacity is about 2 lbs. maybe a little more; rinsing can take longer depending on what you do about wringing out the water at each cycle.

One thing to be careful about: with a dense load such as blue jeans, if you crank that thing too hard (i.e. high starting torque in each direction), you can shear off the connection between the crank and the container. In fact it's a very strong connection, but a strong person can cause it to break if they're not careful. And that's not a replaceable part (or even repairable, I tried various options including putting a bolt through there). However if used with more reasonable force, it should last forever.

Frozen-stick:

Good point about having the fridge connected to outdoor air. In fact I see a potential R&D project there. The connections would have to be removable and sealable at both ends, i.e. so in summer you can remove the flexible duct and put an insulated closure on the openings at the fridge.

Also it would need at least a metal screen and a basic foam dust filter to keep out a) mice etc. and b) dust. This setup should be controlled by a thermostat, and it should also be possible for it to shut off and switch back to the conventional refrigeration cycle in the event of a warm day in winter (more and more likely with climate change).

Re. outdoor clothes drying shed: I've been thinking along similar lines. And use it for a greenhouse as well, with at least some nice hanging plants to keep the air fresh, plus or minus pollen allergy issues. But you might even be able to grow some food crops in there as well. The place should get hot even if the entire window area is filled with plants. And it does need ventilation to let the humidity out. I use an indoor clothes line at present, and a total of 20 linear feet of clothes line (about 7 meters) is sufficient for a load of about 6 - 8 lbs. (3 to 4 kilos), so when designing a drying shed, measure and plan before you build. Using masonry is a good idea for thermal mass so the place stays warm at night .

PeeJay:

Re. the electric bill: I can get to that over the weekend and see if I can extract the figures you're looking for.

Re. hot water in laundry: However, cold water can leave plenty of bacteria deposited on the clothes; hot water is a good idea where sanitizing is needed e.g. underwear, towels, etc., or alternately use chlorine bleach.

Highspeed spin causes no harm to fabrics, as long as you don't load stuff such that e.g. a shirt collar is sitting right at the center of the axis of the cylinder and is loaded loosely enough that it will get stretched. In fact, tumbling in the conventional dryer causes more wear due to friction. If you load the spinner correctly, nothing will ever get stretched. One way to go about this is to place an object such as a clean soda bottle that's about 2" diameter, right in the center of the spinner, and pack the load around it so there's a "hole" in the center of the load. Then remove the soda bottle, close the lid, and spin away. After a while you'll get the hang of it and won't need the soda bottle as a placeholder.

Agreed that conventional washers don't use that much power in the first place, I recall mine was at about 2x the power consumption per pound of laundry compared to the twin-tub (I can go look up those numbers also). For most people the time to consider buying a high-efficiency machine is when you're already going to buy a new washer anyway, i.e. moving house or the old one broke down or whatever. Otherwise the old one can keep chugging along fine.

Re. fridges: ha, "great minds think alike":-). However there is more to doing this than it appears at first, which is why it turned into an R&D project here. Let's get in touch via PM...

Re. cooking appliances: I would guess that anything 1500 watts or below could reasonably be accommodated on most offgrid systems. But if an oven is using 4500 watts, that's a lot of power to draw at one time even if only used for e.g. an hour to bake a cake or something (4.5 KWH), the peak load of 4500 watts could exceed the capacity of an offgrid system. I'm just getting started on this project so I may be completely full of poo at the moment.

Re. basement air for refrigeration: I'd be concerned about any molds or other airborne nasties getting into the food. This looks like another area for R&D if anyone's interested.
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Re: Four Digit Electric Bills

Unread postby 0mar » Fri 12 May 2006, 10:42:35

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Barbara', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')arbara,
What do you use to heat your house and hotwater with? And is your domestic hot water a tank or tankless model?


Heating: public network methane; hotwater: methane (tankless-endless hotwater); oven: methane. No drier. No AC.
(about 90% population here the same)

Methane bill: about € 100 per month.

But when Putin close the pipeline we pay less :lol:.


All electric houses don't use methane, so you pay in two parts what all electric houses pay in one.
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Re: Four Digit Electric Bills

Unread postby pea-jay » Fri 12 May 2006, 14:28:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'R')e. hot water in laundry: However, cold water can leave plenty of bacteria deposited on the clothes; hot water is a good idea where sanitizing is needed e.g. underwear, towels, etc., or alternately use chlorine bleach.


I'd think that the dryer heat would dispatch with that issue with most clothes, if there was bacteria in there to begin with. On real soiled clothes, I do soak them in oxy-cleaner or bleach. I'll use real hot water on single items and hand scrub the problem areas before tossing into the rest of the load. It's good to hear that high speed spinning doesnt affect clothing if done properly.

As for the fridge, I think I won't undertake that until I have a dependable second income to prepare with and a better house set up for it. So in the near term any research will be theoretical.

The cellar is a great way to store bulk dry goods and some produce as long as it isn't wet or rodent infested. But I definately would leave the basement air in the basement.

Here are the pics from the guy in vermont who turned his back door into a winter frige.

Image

Image

End Result:

Image

Of course you need a good dependable winter to make this work.

http://www.popularmechanics.com/science ... page=2&c=y
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Re: Four Digit Electric Bills

Unread postby pea-jay » Fri 12 May 2006, 14:34:31

Actually, the guy has a pretty good blog going over at P.M.

http://www.popularmechanics.com/blog/energyfamily
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Re: Four Digit Electric Bills

Unread postby Oily_Bill » Fri 12 May 2006, 14:44:45

The killawatt meter is a useful device - I used mine to identify usage of Computer, CD player, TV etc. on and on standby. The entertainment center pulled 60 watts on standby !

I got hold of pluggable remote control devices which go between the appiance and the mains. So even though the sockets are in hard to get at places (behind setee, behind tv, etc.) I can turn the devides off and on with a simple remote. Works well, cost about £40 for four devices and the remote. From Maplin electronics. Saves a few KwH a month for sure.
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Re: Four Digit Electric Bills

Unread postby pea-jay » Fri 12 May 2006, 16:37:06

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oily_Bill', '
')
I got hold of pluggable remote control devices which go between the appiance and the mains. So even though the sockets are in hard to get at places (behind setee, behind tv, etc.) I can turn the devides off and on with a simple remote. Works well, cost about £40 for four devices and the remote. From Maplin electronics. Saves a few KwH a month for sure.


It's a lot lower tech and unsophisticated but I use one of these:
Image
Mine cost $10. I originally got it so I wouldn't have to crawl under the christmas tree to turn it on.
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Re: Four Digit Electric Bills

Unread postby Frozen-Stick » Wed 17 May 2006, 15:20:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mommy22', ' ')As far as hanging clothes, why is it such a problem to hang your clothes indoors? I've been doing that for years. It takes about 24 hours to dry(less if you put the rack near a heater). I've got a family of 4 and do about 5-6 loads a week. I try to hang out 2-3 loads at one time so it all comes dry at the same time. I do use the dryer for 1-2 loads, and try to wash (and therefore dry) back to back to save on the heating startup. I use cold water for everything except whites and towels.


The apartement where i lived before had also about 56 square meter and was in a house that was build 1986 or something. The bathroom has no window, neither the kitchen. I had also a big yucca tree and a medium sized weeping fig. So i possesed a lot of humidity sources. :( Unfortunately this house (11 apartements on three floors) had also no cellar room, like so many older houses, for hanging the clothes and really no garden around respectively they belonged to the different inhabitants of the ground floor with the only acces through their apartements (and almost no place for a single baby-carriage but a big underground garage ;-)). The total garden or green area was surely at best as big as the basal surface (that's one of the differences between Europe and America :) ). From the experiences with the apartement before i already had a hygrometer. But because i beleived that such a "new" house would have no problems with mould i didn't pay much attention to it. So i hang my clothes in the first winter always inside on a drying rack. On the balcony the clothes would have needed at least two days (temperatures around or below 0°C and relatively humid). But one day i noticed that the hygrometer showed about 80% of relative humidity. So i got a bit scared about the walls. But no signs of mould appeared.
At the end of the following summer i got problems with vertigo. In the office and also at home. First i thought this were the results of a trip on a boat during a whole week (during my first shower on land shortly after the trip everything rotated around me so that i had to grab for the wall).
I even went to a neurologist, who didn't find a plausible cause.
At the end of the following winter i discovered the probable-most cause: In my living room and also in my bedroom i discovered on an area of about three square meters mould. Then i removed all the wall-paper with mould and sprayed some special liquid with chlorine and spent the following day at a friend.

At least in Germany there is a big problem with mould in a lot of appartements because of the ever tighter construction because of the intent to save heating energy.
But the people really should be aware of the necessity to open the windows a lot, especially in modern houses.
The most modern houses therefore does contain at least an automatic ventilation.

Three years ago, when i didn't know anything about peak oil, i bought a dryer. But a year later i got a shock because of my Electric Bill. Usually i used about 1500 kWh a year, but this time it was 2200 kWh or something. And with 17,5 Euro-Ct for a kilowatthour (a green tariff with about 1 Ct more than the average price) i had to pay a lot more. In the same year i got aware of peak oil and decided to sell my almost new dryer. The problem was also, that my washer only made 800rpms. So the dryer had a lot to do. And therefore also it was quite difficult for me to get my clothes dry in winter without a dryer.
Now i got a washer with up to 1200rpm and that's a big difference also i now didn't need this anymore because during winter it is almost too dry (a lot of air leaks in the whole apartement). :evil:

Nothing is always perfect :lol:
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Curious About PO Members' Energy Bills

Unread postby PeakOiler » Sun 30 Jul 2006, 07:29:09

I'm curious to know how much money people spend per year powering their home. Specifically, what do you pay the electric utility, natural gas company, or for fuel oil on an annual basis? Let's compare numbers.

I thought if would be interesting to collect a set of data from PO members as opposed to looking at government statistics.

I'll start. My house uses no natural gas, propane, or fuel oil. It's "all-electric". (Not counting my wood stove, solar water heater, or a 36-watt PV panel.)

Here are my data for the last eleven years:
Year kw-hrs Amount($)
1995 12639 938.92
1996 12200 978.51
1997 13571 1023.90
1998 14755 1087.90

1999 11306 879.80
2000 12288 995.32
2001 9781 872.87
2002 7857 694.47
2003 5913 542.23
2004 5162 571.65
2005 6532 769.43
2006 YTD 2876 506.56

I recall reading that some people that use fuel oil to heat their homes can easily spend $700/mo during the winter. That blows me away. That's about what I spend in an entire year.
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Re: Curious About PO Members' Energy Bills

Unread postby mekrob » Sun 30 Jul 2006, 07:39:51

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') recall reading that some people that use fuel oil to heat their homes can easily spend $700/mo during the winter. That blows me away. That's about what I spend in an entire year

Perhaps that's because a lot of people live in the North where you use energy during the winter a lot more and you're in Texas. I imagine there would be a bit of a temperture change there.
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Re: Curious About PO Members' Energy Bills

Unread postby PeakOiler » Sun 30 Jul 2006, 07:45:14

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mekrob', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') recall reading that some people that use fuel oil to heat their homes can easily spend $700/mo during the winter. That blows me away. That's about what I spend in an entire year

Perhaps that's because a lot of people live in the North where you use energy during the winter a lot more and you're in Texas. I imagine there would be a bit of a temperture change there.

Of course. So this begs the question, why do people live in such cold climates? Will those places be the best place to live when fuel oil is hard to come by or outrageously expensive?
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Re: Curious About PO Members' Energy Bills

Unread postby Aaron » Sun 30 Jul 2006, 08:56:29

$70 per month?
In Texas?
Sounds sweaty...
The problem is, of course, that not only is economics bankrupt, but it has always been nothing more than politics in disguise... economics is a form of brain damage.

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Re: Curious About PO Members' Energy Bills

Unread postby PeakOiler » Sun 30 Jul 2006, 09:21:14

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Aaron', '$')70 per month?
In Texas?
Sounds sweaty...

lol Aaron.
Not at all. Thanks to a lot of good ideas people have posted in the Conservation, and Planning for the Future forums, I have slowly over the last few years been able to reduce my "energy footprint" and realized just how much juice I had been wasting. A more efficient A/C, better energy management, and better insulation allows a very comfortable home environment in the long summers here.
Does anyone have data or a reference that correlates demographics with energy costs vs. time?
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Re: Curious About PO Members' Energy Bills

Unread postby Vexed » Sun 30 Jul 2006, 13:21:40

Our household avg. over last 2 years:
50 a month in utilities
500 a month in gas
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Re: Curious About PO Members' Energy Bills

Unread postby PeakOiler » Sun 30 Jul 2006, 13:58:26

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Vexed', 'O')ur household avg. over last 2 years:
50 a month in utilities
500 a month in gas

Thanks for the input.
I Googled "demographics" and found these two websites:
University of Michigan Study which seems to be a good tutorial of the US Census stats,
and
US Census.gov
which will require more browsing.
Can anyone point us to stats on a worldwide basis?
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Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 3664
Joined: Thu 18 Nov 2004, 04:00:00
Location: Central Texas
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Re: Curious About PO Members' Energy Bills

Unread postby Ludi » Sun 30 Jul 2006, 14:30:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PeakOiler', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Aaron', '$')70 per month?
In Texas?
Sounds sweaty...

lol Aaron.
Not at all. Thanks to a lot of good ideas people have posted in the Conservation, and Planning for the Future forums, I have slowly over the last few years been able to reduce my "energy footprint" and realized just how much juice I had been wasting. A more efficient A/C, better energy management, and better insulation allows a very comfortable home environment in the long summers here.
Does anyone have data or a reference that correlates demographics with energy costs vs. time?

We were hovering around $70 a month before our rates went up, now it's around $90 a month. We don't use much AC, mostly just for work (home business).
Ludi
 
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