Power!
This year (21 December to 21 December, because that's where the billing cycle rolls), I have used on average 642 watts of electricity, and 858 cubic metres of gas.
That is, if I remember my units and my GCSE physics correctly, enough electricity to smelt enough aluminium to make a seven-foot-high solid statue of myself, and enough methane to inflate a balloon larger than my house and capable of lifting that above-life-size statue.
I don't have any plans at present to divert my electricity and gas supply for 2009 entirely to that endeavour.
That is, if I remember my units and my GCSE physics correctly, enough electricity to smelt enough aluminium to make a seven-foot-high solid statue of myself, and enough methane to inflate a balloon larger than my house and capable of lifting that above-life-size statue.
I don't have any plans at present to divert my electricity and gas supply for 2009 entirely to that endeavour.
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16 grams/mole, 24 litres/mole, 858000 litres = 572000 grams of methane, so even with the weight of the balloon that's enough to carry a fully-grown Bengal tiger.
I do not recommend tying Bengal tigers to methane-filled balloons.
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Perversely interested in electricity bills
I estimate you'd need a 6kW PV system to generate that much electricity (and a big battery, if you were going offgrid). Which would be a *big* rooftop system, bigger than the average for California where the houses are massive. Then again California is about twice as sunny...
Anyway, the aluminium statue is probably a better investment.
Re: Perversely interested in electricity bills
This is a bit fiddly to work out because I get gas and electricity from the same people so they show up in the same category on my online banking.
I think I would need a Reputation in the Art World before I could make back the cost of the electrons and the methane in tickets to watch the more-than-life-size statue soar upwards on a house-sized danger balloon.
Re: Perversely interested in electricity bills
Yeah, I suspected that 640W was a fairly high average for a one-person household with otherwise fairly electricity-unintensive hobbies.
I strongly suspect you will have paid a variety of different rates over the year, not officially correlated with the time of year so much as correlated with changes in long-term gas and electricity prices. (These days you're doing pretty well to beat around 14p/kWh, though you may be able to be cunning with Economy 7 or somesuch.) Hopefully the rates will drop within weeks, but not likely to be nearly to the level of this time last year.