Average electric power used in Australia is 1.1 kW per person averaged over 1 year. ACT has 370,000 people so the average power used is 400 Megawatts. The supply probably has the capacity to supply 2-3 times that at times of peak usage, usually in hot weather when aircon is in use widely.
The leader of the party in power in the Federal government is called the Prime Minister of Australia. The leader of the party in power in the Territory government is called the Chief Minister of the Australian Capital Territory.
The slogan for the ACT is Nation's Capital. It used to be Heart of the Nation and at one stage it was Feel the Power.
Melbourne is located in Victoria and acted as the temporary seat of power for Australia briefly after Federation. Australia's capital is Canberra which is located in the Australian Capital Territory and is situated southwest of Sydney.
There are a few factors that influences power ad territory in the country. The main factors are military, capital and the level of industrialization.
360 kilowatts would power about 1000 TVs, indefinitely. If 360 kilowatts of power were used, the energy used in 1 hour would be 360 kilowatt-hours.
There are 1,000 kilowatts in a single megawatt. These are measures of electrical power which are based on the metric system.
If a dynamo puts out 100,000 kilowatts and the area it services only requires 80,000 kilowatts; then the remaining 20,000 kilowatts is known as its residual power. This extra capacity is useful in withstanding power spikes when consumer demand increases during peak periods.
Total power output of the sun: 3.86 x 1023 kilowatts (386,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 kilowatts) Total solar power received on Earth: 1.74 x 1014 kilowatts (174,000,000,000,000 kilowatts) Solar power falling on 1 square meter of ground: 750 watts (0.75 kilowatt) Output of a 1 square meter solar panel: 120 watts (0.12 kilowatt)
A 1200 watt resistive load hair dryer is equivalent to 1.2 kw (kilowatts).
The formula is Kilowatts = I x E x 1.73 x pf/1000.
Usually by horse power, in metric kilowatts.
kilowatts