good question
A KWH is 1000 watts of power used for one hour. A 100 watt bulb would need to be on for 10 hours to use 1 KWH.1 unit = 1 KW X 1 Hour so it means that unit of current can be converted into kWh by multiplying it by the watt and t time taken (in hours).
The amount of CO2 generated from electricity (kWh) is dependant upon the way the electricity is generated. Burning a barrel of oil to produce electricity yields far more CO2 than generating the same amount of electricity from wind or water. One should contact their electricity provider to get a break-down of how the electricity is generated.
To convert electricity price from per kWh (kilowatt-hour) to mWh (megawatt-hour), you need to multiply the price per kWh by 1,000. This is because there are 1,000 kWh in 1 mWh. For example, if the price is $0.10 per kWh, the price per mWh would be $100.
1 kilowatt-hour is 3412 British Thermal Units, so 4 kWh is 13648 BTU.
The two sets of units are not compatible. While a gallon may be converted to a litre, there is no relationship between kWh and hour.
Assuming it is used to produce electricity, it will be sold in kWh, or MWh probably on a commercial scale.
"Yes, it can. But some units will not convert to others such as KWH into horsepower, as they deal with slightly different things. KWH is energy and horsepower is power, so that won't work"
1 kilowatt-hour is 3412 British Thermal Units, so 4 kWh is 13648 BTU.
To convert from energy units (kWh) to joules, you can use the conversion factor: 1 kWh = 3.6 × 10^6 joules. Therefore, 250 kWh is equal to 9 × 10^8 joules.
It quantified in kW per area or kWh per area per day since the output of wind power is electricity.
It depends on the technology. Current wind turbines placed in windy areas can produce electricity at 3-5 cents/kwh. Newer technologies like high altitude turbines or vertical low velocity turbines claim they can produce for 2 cents/kwh or less.
Normally, gas is measured by volume units. It can be either cubic meters (m^3) or cubic feet (ft^3) or any other volume unit. No mater what is the volume unit, this volume contains a heating value. This heating value is expressed in kWh. You can ask your local gas company how many kWh does a m^3 (or ft^3) of your gas contains. It depends on the type of gas that is distributed in your area.