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Quick way to double your energy costs: Get 2/3rds of your electricity from renewables.



Photo above - America's original solution to fossil fuel electricity generation.

The national average for electricity is 17 cents per kWh. In California, it’s 37 cents. More than double. (see link at bottom). If you’re paying less than 17 cents, count your blessings. If you’re paying more than California’s 37 cent rate, congrats on living in Hawaii.

Okay, I can manage my electric bill SOMEWHAT by turning up the thermostat to 78 degrees in summer. Buying a smaller refrigerator. Unplugging my “vampire” OLED TV when I'm not watching anything. Grilling outdoors instead of using the oven. Oh wait . . . that’s probably going to cost more in the end.

But what about buying an electric car? If you think is math is hard, stop reading here. Okay, are the smart people ready to proceed?

An average American EV needs 35 kWh to travel 100 miles. That electricity costs $0.37 per kWh in California. I would spend $12.60 to go 100 miles. If I drive 1,000 miles a month, that’s $126 in fuel cost. Possibly more if I’m ever trapped in a freeway traffic jam.

But I already have a Honda Civic Hybrid (purchased in November, in Florida.) It gets 50 mpg. A gallon of gas costs $3.19 this week. To go 100 miles it would cost me $6.40. To go 1,000 miles that would be $64. Plus, I earn 2% cashback rewards when I buy gas on my credit card. I get zilch when I write a check to the electric company - just a reminder in my next bill to turn off the lights when they’re not in use.

Okay, I agree that these numbers are scary. And electricity costs are rising much faster than inflation. There seems to be no way to reverse this. No, I am NOT suggesting trading in your EV on a gas car. EV trade-in values have tanked recently, probably because of high electric rates and vandalized charging stations.

Fed Chairman Powell isn’t going to tame electricity costs by jacking up the Fed Funds rates even more. Congress and the White House could continue to pass out huge grants, subsidies, and tax breaks for the electricity flavor of the month, but that’s what got us into this mess in the first place.

And kWh hungry AI is growing exponentially. More server farms. More electric cars. Electric cooktops will replace natural gas. Natural gas furnaces and hot water heaters are also on death row. There’s no good news here.

Maybe I should set my air conditioning to 80 degrees? Or build my own nuclear power plant like Amazon is doing? Actually, Amazon is building 4 dedicated nuclear power plants to operate it's AI stuff. Don't ask where the spent fuel is going to be stored . . .

I’m just sayin’ . . .

CA running 67% on ‘clean’ energy; prices double US average
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Kypro · 51-55, M
That’s absurd. Renewable prices are lower and would keep dropping if policy supported them instead of coal and oil.
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@Kypro evidently they're not lower after grants, tax subsidies, etc are added back in.

you are bad at math, and the reason democrats are failing at energy policy
Kypro · 51-55, M
@SusanInFlorida they are lower for the users and saving tons in pollution costs
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@Kypro we agree that pollution costs are not properly factored into energy production.

and the cost of recycling/sequestering toxic materials (EV batteries, nuclear power rods, giant wind turbine blades, etc) is not factored into those rosy "cost per kWh" projections either.