Call your local electric company and ask what the KWH rate is. There is a wide range of pricing.
To answer this question the rate at which your utility company charges you has to be stated. The cost of a kWh will be found on your electrical bill. Multiply that charge by 1000 which represents the 1000 kWh that was read on your house meter.
Watts x hours/1000 = Kwh Kwh x your electricity cost ($/Kwh) = $ For example: If you run a 60 watt light bulb for 8 hours and your electricity rate is $0.12/Kwh: 60 x 8 / 1000 = 0.48 Kwh x $0.12 $/Kwh = $0.576, or about 6 cents. This calculation works for any appliance, the watt usage is usually listed on the appliance
You have your unit concepts exactly reversed. The "MW" is a rate of using energy, andthe "kWh" is an amount of energy that your meter totals up and you get a bill for.If energy is being used or generated at the rate of 1 MW, and you keep that up fora year, then the total energy that's generated or used is 8,766,000 kWh.
1 mwh = 1000 kwh hence 4 mwh = 4000 kwh
Efficiency = (860.4*100)/(Heat rate in kCal/kWh) or Efficiency = (860.4*4.18*100)/(Heat rate in kJ/kWh) Ex 1: if heat rate is 2500 kCal/kWh, then efficiency is 34.416% Ex 2: if heat rate is 9000 kJ/kWh, then efficiency is 39.96%
MCF * BTU = MMBTU MMBTU * KWH = Heat rate
KWh is an amount of energy, w(watts) is a rate of energy (power). You can't equate them.
Call your local electric company and ask what the KWH rate is. There is a wide range of pricing.
To answer this question the rate at which your utility company charges you has to be stated. The cost of a kWh will be found on your electrical bill. Multiply that charge by 1000 which represents the 1000 kWh that was read on your house meter.
NYSE. Just found it on Big Charts.
The two main factors, which are multiplied together, are:* The rate, which is often expressed in dollars/kWh (or some other money unit, per kWh) * The amount of kWh used
Horsepower is a unit of energy delivery rate, while KWH is a unit of total energy. The two units are not convertible. It is true that, for an electric motor, 1 horsepower is defined as 746 watts, or 0.746 KW, but KWH is an entirely different thing.
NYSEG provides energy to a number of states with the United States. They provide energy to parts of up state New York and New England. They provide energy to over 2 million homes.
Watts x hours/1000 = Kwh Kwh x your electricity cost ($/Kwh) = $ For example: If you run a 60 watt light bulb for 8 hours and your electricity rate is $0.12/Kwh: 60 x 8 / 1000 = 0.48 Kwh x $0.12 $/Kwh = $0.576, or about 6 cents. This calculation works for any appliance, the watt usage is usually listed on the appliance
The number of kilowatts used by a device in one hour. This gives you the rate at which energy is consumed.
KWH