It would just be kW. KW stands for kilowatt, and h stands for hour. If you have "kilowatt hour per hour" the hour portion would be divided out.
About 11.75 cents per kWh for residential use (7.53 cents/kWh for industrial), as of September 2010:
Charges go down from €0.1350 to €0.1078 per kilowatt (kWh), a decrease of 20%.
Hi I believe it is 277.7 kWh per Gj. Cheers
The energy accumulated by your electric meter represents the number of kilo-watt-hours (kWh) you consume. We pay for energy on a tiered scale, and the cost per kWh consumed monthly up to -- say 600 kWh -- is typically low and in the range of 8-12 cents per kWh. Energy consumed above 600 will carry a higher price, like 20 cents per kWh. There may even a third tier at say, 30 cents per kWh for energy consumed above 2000 kWh. Depending on where you live, you may expect the kWh you consume to affect your electric bill in a similar manner.
The cost of electricity in Minneapolis is about 6.5 cents per KWH.
A watt is a J/s. So a kWh is 1000 (J * hr)/s. Since there are 3600 seconds in an hour: 1 kWh = 3,600,000 J. There are 4.18 J per calorie, so: 1 kWh = 861,000 cal 665 kWh = 573,000,000 cal
Divide the dollars per kWh by 3,412.14163
Coal cost about $o.o54 cents per kwh
About 11.75 cents per kWh for residential use (7.53 cents/kWh for industrial), as of September 2010:
4.5 tons of refrigeration is a unit of power while kwh or kw-hr is unit of energy. Its not possible. Maybe you mean kw only not kwhr. 1ton of ref= 12000btu/hr = 3.51 kw
100 kWh
If you mean dollars PER mwh and cents PER kwh, divide by 10.
if you are under 2760kwh then you will pay 0.538 rmb per each kwh you use.
Typically you would use 0.276 litres/kWh for HSD and 0.234 litres/kWh for HFO
Charges go down from €0.1350 to €0.1078 per kilowatt (kWh), a decrease of 20%.
Around $0.28 per Kwh in Singapore Dollars which is around $0.22 in US Dollars
Hi I believe it is 277.7 kWh per Gj. Cheers