It really depends but it can get up to 100 dollars a month.
.32 per gallon
AnswerThis answer depends on where you live, how much you are paying for a drum of oil and how big an area you are heating. Why not write us back with at least the measurements of the heating area so we will be better equipped to answer your question. The area that you live in would help as well.There are some stats based on 2004-2005 across all types of heating at the link below.
The average heating bill per month is anywhere from 50 dollars to 100 dollars per person. The more people living in the house the less it is per person.
You can refer to the Heating Oil Price Survey for January 13, 2015 mass.gov/eea/energy-utilities-clean-tech/home-auto-fuel-price-info/heating-oil-price-surveys.html
It depends on where in the world, and what the gas is used for (cooking, heating).
== == It depends on where you live and the cost of the fuel. You have to convert to the heating value of gas and oil, factor in efficiency, and then compare the cost per BTU's. For example: Determine the cost of gas vs. oil in your area: For example, heating oil in Seattle is $4.10 per gallon while gas is $1.09 per therm. Next, calculate the cost of fuel per MMBTU's. Knowing that heating oil has 138,690 BTU per gallon and natural gas has 100,000 BTU per therm, you can calculate using this equation: $ cost --------- X 1,000,000 = cost per MMBTU BTU's The result of the above step is $29.56/MMBTU for oil, and $10.87/MMBTU for gas. Next, divide the above by the efficiency of the furnace. Oil furnaces are 80 to 90% efficient and gas furnaces are typically 83% efficient. The net cost of the fuel per MMBTU is $34.78 for oil and $13.09 for gas in this scenario. If your old house uses 63 MMBTU a heating season, that is a total of $2,200 for oil and $824 for gas for the whole heating season
10000000000 gallons of cheese and toenails
That was the month and year that a barrel of crude oil reached its highest level: $128.08 per barrel.
NOT SURE WHAT YOU ARE ASKING BUT: BURNING #1 HEATING OIL PRODUCES 140,000 BTU'S PER GALLON. ELECRTICITY PRODUCES 3413 BTU'S PER 1,000 WATTS (1 KILOWATT) lc
Consider that there are 138, 500 BTUs per gallon of heating oil. Crank the handle on the math machine and that's 7.22 x 10-6 gal / BTU for your energy equivalent. To generate one BTU per hour, that's how much oil it will take.
The residential heating oil industry is currently working to cut the sulfur content of heating oil and residential fuel oil from 1,500 parts per million to 15 parts per million by 2018. In addition to sulfur reduction, the heating oil industry is also working on new fuel blends called Bioheat which contain between 2 and 20 percent renewable fuel.
about $494,494,099 per month