Sentences with phrase «residential electricity prices in»

[1] In 2030, residential electricity prices in both the nuclear case and the compliance case are 14.2 cents per kilowatt hour in real prices — 16 percent higher than in 2013.
As a result, Danish and German consumers are paying some of the highest residential electricity prices in Europe — three times as high as in the United States — for the «benefit» of having wind and solar power generated in their country regardless of whether that power can be used domestically.
New Jersey, Massachusetts, and New York are top distributed solar states despite relatively less favorable solar resources because of consistent state solar PV policies and incentives and some of the highest residential electricity prices in the country.

Not exact matches

(2007) • Contribution of Renewables to Energy Security (2007) • Modelling Investment Risks and Uncertainties with Real Options Approach (2007) • Financing Energy Efficient Homes Existing Policy Responses to Financial Barriers (2007) • CO2 Allowance and Electricity Price Interaction - Impact on Industry's Electricity Purchasing Strategies in Europe (2007) • CO2 Capture Ready Plants (2007) • Fuel - Efficient Road Vehicle Non-Engine Components (2007) • Impact of Climate Change Policy Uncertainty on Power Generation Investments (2006) • Raising the Profile of Energy Efficiency in China — Case Study of Standby Power Efficiency (2006) • Barriers to the Diffusion of Solar Thermal Technologies (2006) • Barriers to Technology Diffusion: The Case of Compact Fluorescent Lamps (2006) • Certainty versus Ambition — Economic Efficiency in Mitigating Climate Change (2006) • Sectoral Crediting Mechanisms for Greenhouse Gas Mitigation: Institutional and Operational Issues (2006) • Sectoral Approaches to GHG Mitigation: Scenarios for Integration (2006) • Energy Efficiency in the Refurbishment of High - Rise Residential Buildings (2006) • Can Energy - Efficient Electrical Appliances Be Considered «Environmental Goods»?
And even though the state's residential home electricity consumption ranks among the lowest (due in part to those high prices and generally lower air conditioning needs in summer and the use of gas and oil for heating loads in the winter rather than electricity), the average monthly electric bill in 2016 was just over $ 142 per month, third highest in the nation.
In 2014, average residential electricity consumption in Ohio was 901 kWh per month, at an average price of 12.5 per kWh, for a total bill of $ 112.62 per montIn 2014, average residential electricity consumption in Ohio was 901 kWh per month, at an average price of 12.5 per kWh, for a total bill of $ 112.62 per montin Ohio was 901 kWh per month, at an average price of 12.5 per kWh, for a total bill of $ 112.62 per month.
Together these cost components comprise around 5 % of residential electricity prices at a national level and are not expected to have a significant impact on the total residential electricity price over the reporting period in most jurisdictions.»
«Renewable Energy Target (RET) costs are forecast to comprise around 11 % of the total increase in residential electricity prices at a national level.
The average residential price of electricity in the US is about 8.5 cents / kwh, and many utilities sell off - peak power for 2 - 4 cents / kwh (id at 83).
Energy prices (average gasoline and retail electricity price) and public infrastructure (share of working population commuting via public transportation) were important in explaining the interstate variation in the use of transportation fuels and residential electricity and are readily addressed by climate and energy policies.
New research predicts the energy storage market in Germany will increase 11-fold in the next five years, with the residential market buoyed by declining feed - in tariffs, high electricity prices and $ 30 million in subsidies, while the primary reserve market boosts activity within the utilities sector.
While the price of residential electricity in the United States has increased only 30 percent since 1995, the price of natural gas has more than tripled due to rising demand and production costs.
The average residential price of electricity in the US is about 8.5 cents / kwh, and many utilities sell off - peak power for 2 - 4 cents / kwh.
Industrial wind turbines have so driven up electricity prices that Ontario now suffers the highest residential rates in Canada and the fastest growing rates in North America.
Assuming retail electricity costs will increase 5 % / year (conservative due to the grid investments being made and the Qld increases have been 11.37 % & 5.38 % for 2008 & 2009 with another 14 % mooted for 2010) and PV prices will drop 5 % / year, I calculate retail grid parity arriving in Qld as soon as 2012 for a 3kW residential system.
---- 2011b, Modelling of PV & Electricity Prices in the Australian Residential Sector, 2011, The Australian PV Association.
By 2040, residential electricity prices are 14.9 cents per kilowatt hour (22 percent higher than in 2013) in the compliance case and 14.8 cents per kilowatt hour (21 percent higher than in 2013) in the nuclear case.
Residential customers in most areas of the country are seeing lower retail electricity prices this year compared with the same time last year.
The price that most residential consumers in Ontario pay for their electricity depends on when they use it.
In particular, environmental regulations like the Environmental Protection Agency's proposed Clean Power Plan (CPP) can significantly affect future electricity prices for US residential consumers.
The average GED * / kwh of coal - generated electricity is 60 percent of the average residential retail price of electricity in a state relying entirely on coal.
Note that residential electricity prices vary by the primary fuel type used in electricity production.
More, the price of electricity in Hawaii does not noticeably distort the economy there at the residential level or even for light industrial purposes.
Hence, the GED * / kwh associated with electric power generation using coal, oil, and natural gas represents 43, 33, and 7 percent of the average residential retail price of electricity in 2002.
In states that primarily rely on coal - fired power, residential electricity prices averaged 6 cents per kwh.
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