It depends on how long it takes. 1.05 kWh is 1050 watt-hours, and that could be 1 watt for 1050 hours, or 1050 watts for 1 hour, or anything in between.
A 32 watt bulb uses 32 watt-hours, or 0.032 kWh, every hour it is used.
To find kWh a time frame has to be given. That is what the h in kWh stands for.
A 1000 watt device operated continusouly for 1 hour would equal 1 Kwh.
1 kWh = 1,000 watt-hour1 watt = 1 joule per second1 hour = 3,600 seconds(1,000 watt-hour) = (1,000 joule/second) x (3,600 second/hour) = 3,600,000 joules
KWH stands for kilowatt hour, meaning a thousand watts used for an hour. In terms of, for example, the familiar 60 watt light bulb, you would need (just under) 17 such light bulbs operating for an hour to consume 1 KWH.
A kilowatt is 1,000 watts. A 60 watt bulb uses 60 watts in an hour. So, in half an hour it uses 30 watts. Now if a kilowatt costs 20 cents, what does 0.03 kilowatt cost?
25 watts * 24 hours = 600 watt hours = 0.6 kwh {1 kilowatt hour = 1000 watt hours} 0.6 kwh * (0.085156 per kwh ) = 0.0510936 or about 5.1 cents
In ten hours, a 200W bulb will use: 10 * 200 = 2000 Watt-hours = 2 kwh
Five 200watt solar panels for a period of one hour will create one kWh. So, one 200 watt panel will create 0.2 kWh of electricity
You better have a 10,000 watt capable generator.
35 kilocalories (kcal) equals about 0.40705-kilowatt hours (kWh). The conversion base is for 1 kcal there is 0.001163 kWh. Converting the kilocalories to watt-hours is 40.705.
When you get your electric bill, look to see how many kilo watt hours (kWh) you used for the month. Then how much the bill cost. take the price divided by the (kWh). This is truly what your paying per (kWh). One (kWh) is 1000 watts being used for a hour, so one 100 watt light being used for 10 hours = 1 (kWh) or a 1500 watt hair dryer being used for an hour = 1.5 (kWh). so if your appliance power use is listed in amps, take amps x volts to figure out the watts. Plus determine how often the appliance runs. this will give You an idea of cost.