Boiling
a full kettle five times over the course of a day will cost 45 cent.
However, if you only put enough water in for a single cup of tea, the
cost falls by at least 15 cent a day.
We
are all going to be asked to micromanage our energy usage over the
winter months in a way that has not been seen in this country for
generations.
There
will scarcely be a light turned on without a question mark hanging over
its purpose while the thermostats that set heat levels in our homes are
likely to be checked and rechecked with even the slightest move in to
the 20s likely to be a cause of concern in many quarters.
While
we have not reached the point where we can expect to hear the stern
knock of the Glimmerman just yet but with blackouts also on the cards –
particularly at the peak times between 5pm and 7pm – we’re definitely
heading in that direction.
With
Russia’s weaponising of its gas reserves, mounting concern over the
capacity of the national grid to manage our energy supply, as well as
price increases which will see many Irish households paying over €2,000
more for their energy over the next 12 months than they did in 2021,
this will be a winter like no other.
And
the grim reality is that the €2,000 extra could quite easily become
€3,000 or even more depending on the trajectory of the crisis.
But
how are we to monitor how much we use and keep the spending in check –
insofar as it is possible to keep it in check – when we don’t know how
much the things we rely on every single day to keep us warm, clean,
illuminated and fed actually cost?
Everyone
knows how much a litre of motor fuel costs because there are signs
screaming the prices at us from every forecourt in the State. We know
how much we spend on groceries because we have to hand over the money
before we can leave the shop.
Using an oven for one hour will add €1.29 to your daily bill.
But
how much does it cost to have a shower, or heat the livingroom, or have
a cup of tea or deck the halls with festive lights and the garden with
glowing snowmen as we hurtle to that most wonderful time of the year?
In very general terms, domestic energy follows a 60-20-20 rule.
That
means about 60 per cent of a typical bill goes on heating our homes,
with 20 per cent needed for heating our water and 20 per cent spent on
our electrical appliances including lights. About 2 per cent of our
total bill is used for cooking. But to really manage our energy budget
we need to drill deeper.
If
we use the 60-20-20 rule and readily available figures from energy
providers, we can have a stab at establishing the costs although it is
worth bearing in mind these are guideline figures only and are based on
the average standard unit rate for domestic energy usage which is now
just over 43 cent per kilowatt hour used. This time last year it was
closer to 25 cent per KWH, meaning prices have climbed a shocking 80 per
cent in no more than 12 months.
Heating
is the biggest expense but how much it costs depends on many variables.
How big is your house? Do you use oil or gas? How many rooms are you
heating? What kind of insulation do you have? Do you have a chimney?
What is the Ber rating of your home?
With
recent increases, few people with a dual fuel service from any of
Ireland’s energy companies will have much change out of €3,000 over the
next 12 months based on the 60-20-20 rule, with about €1,800 of that
spent on heating or homes. If we assume that our heat is on for eight
months a year, that works out at €225 a month or about €7.50 every day
that it is on. If there are six rooms that need heating, you are looking
at €1.25 per room per day.
If
you lower the thermostat in your house from 22 degrees Celsius to 20
degrees you could see the daily cost fall to €7. While a decline of 50
cent may not seem like a whole lot, it amounts to savings of about €120
between now and next April.
A
shower uses 9.5KWH of energy which would take the hourly cost to €4.05.
A 10-minute shower then costs 68 cent. Every minute less you spend in
the shower saves you seven cent so if you have an eight-minute shower
each day rather than a 10-minute one and you do that for a full year,
you will knock another €51 off your annual energy bill.
After
the shower comes the hair drying. Such devices use about 2KWH an hour
but there won’t be many – if any – people who will need to use one for
an hour. But if we allow 10 minutes for the drying of hair, it comes in
at 14 cent.
Boiling
a kettle for a morning cup of tea will cost 9 cent. Boiling that kettle
five times over the course of a day will cost 45 cent although it is
worth pointing out that this price is based on boiling a full kettle. If
you only put enough water in for a single cup of tea, you will see the
cost falling by at least 15 cent a day.
A
Nespresso (or similar) machine is more energy efficient and one such
device used eight times a day for one minute at a time will cost just 6
cent.
Toasting two slices of bread will cost 3 cent.
Heating
a bowl of microwave porridge for the required two minutes will cost 2.5
cent. A microwave uses about 0.8KWH of energy in one hour and if it
used for a further 30 minutes over the course of a day then the total
price will come in at 34.5 cent.
A
60 watt lightbulb is very energy efficient and uses 0.01KWH so if one
is left on for an hour it will cost about 2 cent. Keep it on for 10
hours and you will be worse off to the tune of 20 cent. Again, it is not
a significant amount of money but it is still an area where savings can
be made. If just one lightbulb lights one empty room for 10 hours each
day between now and the clocks going forward in March, the additional
energy cost will be €36.
A
washing machine uses about 0.8KWH of energy so a two-hour cycle of
washing costs only 68 cent. By contrast, a tumble dryer uses 4KWH of
energy and, based on average prices right now, a two-hour cycle to dry
your clothes will cost a pretty eye-watering €3.44.
At
least the tumbler drier is not likely to be used every day or even
multiple times every day, unlike the dishwasher. It requires 0.8KWH for a
two-hour cycle which is a further 68 cent. Run your dishwasher twice a
day and the cost will climb to €1.36. On a day like Christmas Day when
the dishwasher is likely to be on the go constantly, the cost might rise
to well over €3.
Spending
eight hours working on a desktop computer will set you back 86 cent,
although if you switch to a laptop and leave it plugged in for much of
the day, the cost falls to 32 cent.
The amount of energy a fridge consumes will depend on how big it is and what it is asked to do. Photograph: Tolga Akmen/EPA
The
fridge is one of the very few devices that we have to leave on every
hour of every day – and one where there are no savings to be made.
Obviously the amount of energy it consumes will depend on how big it is
and what it is asked to do. If you have a small ice-box and a waist-high
fridge, the cost will be dramatically cheaper than if you have an
American-style fridge freeze. But a ballpark figure for running a fridge
freezer based on today’s standard unit rates is €1.08 a day.
Using
an oven for one hour will add €1.29 to your daily bill while if you
bring something to the boil on the stove top it will set you back
another 5 cent.
The
cost of vacuuming will again depend on what machine you have and how
long you are using it and how many times a week you use it. But a
20-minute run around your house with a typical machine will probably set
you back 14 cent.
If
a television stays on for six hours, it will cost about 25 cent while
the Alexa or Google speaker playing music and hanging on your every word
will cost another 3 cent a day with the cost of charging your phone
from dead to full coming in at about 9 cent.
If you have an electric blanket and turn it on for two hours before you climb into a double bed, it will cost another 19 cent.
Leaving
all your devices on standby overnight will cost 10-20 per cent of the
cost of actually using them. Again the savings to be made here are very
small – maybe only 10 or 20 cent a day – but leaving something on
standby when it is not likely to be used is just wasting money and the
energy leakage can be stopped without it making any difference
whatsoever to the quality of your life.
Leaving
all your devices on standby overnight will cost 10-20 per cent of the
cost of actually using them. Photograph: Tolga Akmen/EPA
And
finally we come to the Christmas lights. While it is far too early to
be thinking about Christmas, the good news is that modern LED lights are
a very small drain on your pocket and on the national grid and we are
unlikely to be told to bathe our trees in miserable gloom over the
season to be jolly. The cost of keeping a few strings of LED lights
draped around a tree over Christmas will be not much more than a euro
which is at least something to celebrate.
*Figures based on a typical standard unit rate for electricity of 43 cent per KWH.
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