366 kilowattshours. Power equals watts.
If what you want to know is "I got billed for 366 kWh, How much energy is that, and is it possible my house used that?" a single 60W light bulb left on all the time in a month will use .06 kW per hour or 43.2 kWh per month, so 366 kWh is about 7 60W light bulbs left on full time. A 9W CFL-60W equivalent will use .009Kw per hour or 6.48 kWh per month, 366kWh at that rate is over 50 lights on full time.
Use CFL's and be vigilant to keep people from leaving electrical items on. Replace CRT TV's with LED or LCD TV's, turn off computers immediately when not using them. Charge laptops and cel phones at work (fully charged electronics chargers still use energy). Unplug all vampire electronics (cable modems, cable set top boxes, sat boxes, microwaves, toasters, coffee makers, anything with a display or a clock) many devices have Transformers that use energy even when off. Replace electric tanks style water heaters with point of use tankless water heaters and use the old water tank to store water in an attempt to get public water to room temp or add a boiler circulator pump and a solar loop to use the sun to pre-heat "hot" water. Dry as much clothes as you can by hanging them to dry. It is up to you to stick it back to the electric utilities and there government guaranteed profits for the shareholders.
We are a household of 5, our average electric bill was just over 25 kWh before we added our solar panels, we used to shove over 35kWh back into their filthy system, receiving 1/4 the current market rate. We now power our 2 neighbors and get 1/2 the market rate for the power.
I pay .07 cents a kWh.
voltage is pressure and kWh is energy... therefore pressure is energy...
Remember that 1 kW = 1000 W So 100 / 1000 = 0.1 100 W = 0.1 kW You take the power - the wattage of the lamp, and multiply with how long it is lit. A 100 W bulb - 0.1 kW - will use 0.1 kWh in one hour. Or 1 kWh in 10 hours. Or 10 kWh in 100 hours.
You don't need to - the "unit" by which electricity is sold is the kWh.kWh = unit1 kWh = 1 uniteach unit is equal to 1000 watt-hours.CommentThe term, 'unit', is short for 'Board of Trade Unit'. The Board of Trade used to regulate the cost of electricity in Britain.
There are zero amps in 32 kWh. Watts are the product of amps times volts. Without stating what the voltage is, this calculation can not be made. I = W/E is the formula to find amperage but there has to be a time constant if kWh is used. Usually the question is asked as to how many amps are in 32 kW.
1 kWh creates approximately 1 kg of CO2 from a black coal fired power station.
Dinorwig is a 'pumped storage' hydro power facility. It has a capacity to produce 1.89GW of electricity, which equates to 6.8TWh. I terms of kWh, this would be 6.8E9 kWh or 6,800,000,000 kWh. (6.8 billion kWh).
21 billion KWh per year
There is no difference in the meaning of kWh or KWH. Both forms of writing kWh mean "kilo watt hours," and the format acceptable to most in the technical community is "kWh."AnswerThe correct symbol for kilowatt hour is kW.h.
2,598,000,000,000 kWh a year, that was estimated in 2008.
KW is the unit power KWh is the unit of electrical energy KW or Watt defines the rating or power of a electrical equipment. For ex: motors, heaters etc. KWh is a measurement that how much energy is been consumed by the electrical equipments. Generally, operating 1KW rated equipment for an hour measures one KWh. Energy meters are the instruments for this purpose
The answer to this question is zero. There is no kWh given.
Multiply the figure by your cost per kwh. The kwh cost is available from your local power company or utility. For instance, if a kwh was priced at 7.6 cents/kwh, then the total cost would be a bit over $30.
The energy cost depends on the size of the system. Large concentrated systems cost $0.10-$0.15 per kWh. Medium and small scale systems can cost from $0.25-$0.50 per kWh, when averaged.
1 kW x 12 hours = 12 kWh. As to the cost - that may vary from country to country. Look at a bill from the power company to see how much they charge you per kWh. If that is not explicitly stated, divide the total amount of the bill, by the number of kWh used.
To find out the cost of operating 60 1000watt Metal Halide lamps for 10 hours, you multiply the amount of power (in kilowatts) by time and hours. That will give you kWh (kilowatt hours), then you find out how much your power costs in $/kWh, then divide the kilowatt hours you are using by the cost ($/kWh).
electrical energy (in kWh) = electric power (in kWh) X time (in hours) E=Pt