The term, 'electricity', is a generic, all-encompassing term for a branch of science. Electricity, therefore, isn't a quantity, so it cannot be measured.
A megawatt is an unit of measurement for power, the rate of transfer of energy.
1000
1 MW is 1000 kilowatts, so in 1 Hour it will sell 1000 units (taking a unit as 1 kilowatt hour)
The units mw and mW are the same. They mean milliwatts. The terms Mw and MW, however, means megawats, which is a billion (1x109) times greater than a mw or a mW.Another AnswerThe correct symbol for a watt is an upper-case 'W'. So the correct symbol for a milliwatt is 'mW' (not 'mw'), and the correct symbol for a megawatt is 'MW' (not 'Mw').
1.493 mw
10.
1000
100 MW
2,000 MW
an all nighter
A peak load of approximately 1400 MW in Winter
7.4 acres
* Electricity - total installed capacity: 19,505 MW(2007) * Electricity - Sources (2007) ** fossil fuel - 12,580 MW - 65% of total ** hydro - 6,463 MW - 33% of total ** nuclear - 462 MW - 2% of total But currently(2008-09) government is producing only 12-14000 MW.
Although several large-scale dams can produce over 1000 MW, an average dam will produce anywhere from 80 MW to 500 MW. An average value for those would probably be about 200 MW.
There is no released figure for power usage overall. But the peak power supplied is 36 MW. Solar heating for hot water adds about 3.2 MW or about 690 MW-hours per year.
There is no released figure for power usage overall. But the peak power supplied is 36 MW. Solar heating for hot water adds about 3.2 MW or about 690 MW-hours per year.
Currently, Iraq's power generation output averages less than 6,000 MW, while the demand is typically more than 10,000 MW.[1] For 2006, the average peak electricity supply was 4,280 MW exceeding demand averaged 8,180 MW by about 3,950 MW. According to U.S. agency officials, demand for electricity has been stimulated by a growing economy and a surge in consumer purchases of appliances and electronics. In addition, electricity is subsidized in Iraq, which leads to increased demand. If the Ministry of Electricity's master plan for 2006 to 2015 to rehabilitate and expand the national grid is implemented, the ministry estimates that Iraq will be able to meet its projected demand for electricity in 2009 [2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electricity_in_Iraq
i gotta do same question for my science assignment