29.30710701592
To calculate the cost per kWh given 35 kWh of usage and the total cost, divide the total cost by the number of kWh. For example, if the total cost is $70 for 35 kWh, the cost per kWh would be $70 / 35 kWh = $2 per kWh.
Some root words for "therm" include "thermo" and "thermometer."
The energy accumulated by your electric meter represents the number of kilo-watt-hours (kWh) you consume. We pay for energy on a tiered scale, and the cost per kWh consumed monthly up to -- say 600 kWh -- is typically low and in the range of 8-12 cents per kWh. Energy consumed above 600 will carry a higher price, like 20 cents per kWh. There may even a third tier at say, 30 cents per kWh for energy consumed above 2000 kWh. Depending on where you live, you may expect the kWh you consume to affect your electric bill in a similar manner.
1 mwh = 1000 kwh hence 4 mwh = 4000 kwh
1 therm of UK gas is approximately equal to 29.3 kilowatt-hours. The price of 1 therm can vary depending on the provider and market conditions, but it is typically around £0.035 to £0.04.
A therm is an energy unit (equal to 100000 BTU) while kilowatts are power (energy/time). 1 watt = 1 Joule/second, and 1 kilowatt = 1000 Joules/second. The kilowatt hour is an energy unit (power X time = energy). 1 therm = 29.31 kWh
A watt is a J/s. So a kWh is 1000 (J * hr)/s. Since there are 3600 seconds in an hour: 1 kWh = 3,600,000 J. There are 4.18 J per calorie, so: 1 kWh = 861,000 cal 665 kWh = 573,000,000 cal
100 therm is more then 3.20 therm
There are 100,000 BTU (British Thermal Units) in a therm.
therm means heat
Approximately 60,000 kwh @ annual average wind speed of 5 m/s Approximately 115,000 kwh @ annual average wind speed of 6 m/s Approximately 225,000 kwh @ annual average wind speed of 7 m/s
1 Therm is equal to 100,000 BTU.
Therm-O-Disc was created in 1947.
'Therm' is from Classical Greece, and means 'heat'. As in 'thermometer' ; heat measurer.
KWH
one cubic feet = 1028 Btu
The therm is a non-SI unit of heat energy equal to 100,000 BTU.