Posted on 09/27/2022 7:49:29 PM PDT by bitt
The US government expects households to see their heating bills increase by 54% compared with last winter. U.S. consumers will spend more to heat their homes this winter than last year due to surging energy prices, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) projected in its winter fuels outlook on Wednesday.
US natural gas has climbed to its highest price since 2014 and is up roughly 90% over the last year. The wholesale price of heating oil has more than doubled in the last 12 months.
The biggest reason for this winter’s higher heating bills is the recent increase in prices for energy commodities after they dropped to multi-year lows in 2020. Demand has simply grown faster than production. Another reason for the rise is how global the market for fuels has become.
Additionally, thank Democrats who are destroying the fossil fuel industry with nothing ready to replace it. Democrats said they want to increase fossil fuel costs exponentially so solar and wind look more attractive.
Those in the midwest would see bills up an estimated 49%. This could be the most expensive winter for natural gas-heated homes since 2008-2009.
The National Energy Assistance Directors Association (NEADA) estimates it will cost Wisconsin residents from 1,025 to $1,202 to heat an average home this winter. That’s an exorbitant increase of more than 17.2% compared to last winter. It’s the second year in a row of major increases.
(Excerpt) Read more at conservativechoicecampaign.com ...
Since the end of August I’ve pulled only 100 watts from the grid. I do that as my “zero base” as a way to make sure my solar inverters don’t err and put power onto the grid. 100 watts X 24 hours = 2.4 kWh daily. That is all Ive pulled from the grid since the solar upgrade I did in August. That’s even with charging my EV at home, plus running my A/C a bit to cool my 2,300 sq ft home in the still warm days in Alabama.
Maybe you should do the same, especially living in the desert. Your dry air will give you a better throughout (the humidity in my air does a slight filtering of the sunlight). Solar is horrible to implement at the utility level. But it works fine at the home level if you live in the southern half of the U.S. and have some space on your land or roof facing the equator with no shade.
I told my wife I didn’t want to just fuss about Brandon raising our energy costs. I told her that our retirement planning is worth preserving and taking our energy needs into our own hands and doing what we can to provide as much of our energy as we can.
330s are nice. top-feed stainless?
Be sure to vape out any water, especially if buried. Total PITA when the corrosion kicks in.
“they either think the people can afford it or want to impoverish everyone because they want the great reset to usher in glorious “revolution”.
The latter, all part of the Great Culling.
Actually I dug deep into my pockets. Not the ground.
900 gallons of HHO, 3 cords of seasoned wood and 100 lbs of propane nowadays cost a pretty penny.
You know it is bad when you almost have to take out a loan or empty your bank account to survive the winter. What is going to happen to those who cannot afford this?
Biden’s War on Energy started this whole mess.
Propane is almost $4/gal. Yuk....
Oh my. Why chain saw and splitter will cost me $30 this year.
BiteMe isn’t orchestrating anything anymore.
The POTATUS is just the guy Deep State is hiding behind.
Since the end of August I’ve pulled only 100 watts from the grid. I do that as my “zero base” as a way to make sure my solar inverters don’t err and put power onto the grid. 100 watts X 24 hours = 2.4 kWh daily. That is all Ive pulled from the grid since the solar upgrade I did in August. That’s even with charging my EV at home, plus running my A/C a bit to cool my 2,300 sq ft home in the still warm days in Alabama.
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Sounds like a voice of wisdom.
People told me I was crazy putting 12KW on my roof for a cost of about $50k but the government had a 30% rebate and I had a lot of food storage in the freezers and wanted to protect it. Well now the solar has paid for itself and saving me a lot.
I think solar is pretty good for home use, not so much for the grid though. A good part of my cost is in the batteries. I have a 3000+sqft house so the A/C can be pretty expensive and if I use the main a/c plant the battery will only last a few days without sunshine to recharge. If however I use the mini splits instead of the larger system I can keep the most important rooms in the house comfortable winter or summer and have the battery last for weeks instead of days without sunshine.
I have a NG gas and a gasoline generator if there is no sunshine for extended periods. I’m also working on a Lister style diesel generator that just sips fuel. 4 hours of the 16kw ng generator and about the same time on the 15kw Lister will give me two days of battery operation.
Spending a lot of money for solar was not something my wife wanted to do when I did it, now however it seems like a wise thing to have done even to her. I’m afraid it will get much worse before it gets better. Even in Kentucky with only 12kw of PV’s on the roof I seldom have anything more than the minimum electric bill.
We have a house in Florida, getting pounded by Ivan right now that has only 9kw of PV on the roof. The 9kw gives us much more power down there than the 12kw here (Ky) because there is so much sunshine. With a pool pump and pool heater we need every little bit we make. I do not however have battery backup down there. I’m hoping the PV’s survive the storm, we’re in Cape Coral and getting the worst of it. I expect I will have to go down tomorrow and start the clean up. I do have a portable generator so at least I will have hot water for showers, lights and refrigeration, no A/C though.
You and I think a lot alike.
I couldn't do mini-splits because part of my house is in the ground (nowhere for condensation drips to go). So I have a variable speed heat pump. It replaced both my old A/C and my old natural gas furnace (I also have heat strips for the few times it gets too cold for the heat pump). I also replaced my natural gas water heater with a hybrid water heater (it has a built-in heat pump to heat the water tank). On that I duct the air intake from the attic to give it free hot air as the heat source so it doesn't have to run as long to draw heat from the air (might as well use the free heat that's in the attic). During the warm parts of the year I duct part of the air output (cold air from the water heater's heat pump) into the living areas. (But not too much because it was creating a cold spot in the living room LOL.) The idea is to help my home heat pump not have to work as hard to keep the house cool when I take a shower and run the water heater (which generates cold air -- might as well use it).
Not only do those two appliances use less power to do their jobs, but they also demand less power immediately. My old A/C would draw 4kW when it'd run, and if I had a standard electric water heater it'd also draw 4kW. That's 8kW if they run at the same time. My inverters total 18kW DC-to-AC continuous capacity. So that'd leave me only 10kW left to charge the EV and use other power before my inverters would have to pull from the grid. The water heater I have draws only 300 watts, even though it takes 2 hours to reheat the water tank if both my wife and I take back-to-back showers and drain the hot water. The variable speed heat pump runs practically all day, especially with it set to lower the humidity in the house. But because it runs all day it rarely has to crank up in high gear and demand 4kW like a regular A/C would.
So I made those changes to not only use less power throughout the whole day, but also use less power at any given moment. That allows my wife and I to do random things throughout the day that require power with little chance that the total load would require pulling some from the grid. All while I have no natural gas bill. And with the EV I rarely buy gas at the pump (I every now and then drive my ICE pickup, but not nearly as much as I used to).
Just talked with my heating fuel company. My tank is scheduled to be topped off in Nov. I have a 500 gallon tank so it’s going to be quite the bill.
4.09 here in maryland... thanks blo snyden...
I just paid 2.30 a gal to fill my tanks.
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