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Re: The energy crisis
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So, for us, that means a forecast rise to £3,700 annual energy bill (up from last year’s £1,400). |
Re: The energy crisis
I was expecting worse.
At least by the time April comes along, the weather will be getting warmer. There is always the [small] hope that the actual costs will start to fall by the end of next year. |
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"Outstanding" as in owing? "Outstanding" as in sarcastic? |
Re: The energy crisis
Option 3, Bob…
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Re: The energy crisis
Bulb bill for gas and electric for a small 2 bed bungalow 17th October to 16th November £170.57, much higher than last bill and we have cut down drastically on our energy usage. However we are £490.00 in credit so not too worried at the mo.
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Re: The energy crisis
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Over the last 12 months or so I have cut over 100KWHs average per month from my leccy and refuse to use heating more than a couple of hours a week to dry clothes. I wrap up warm and last winter manged without and intend to do the same this winter. The increase I have seen since October therefore has not been a great deal. I have almost £400 credit but now I know it is not going up to the expected ofgem cap in April (5K iirc) I am going to pull a ton out of it and enjoy spending it |
Re: The energy crisis
The daytime temperatures have dropped one degree each day over the past 4 days. The kitchen and dining room have lingered at 19.5c, as have the bedrooms. But this morning it's 17c everywhere, but 14c in the hall and landing, and only 7c outside.
I feel warm enough, but I shall keep an ear open for the family moaning about it being "cold". The lad is bombproof, as he is still wandering the house in his underwear in the mornings. :shocked: |
Re: The energy crisis
Our neighbours have affected us. They've build extensions over the road that blocks early morning sun from hitting our house and keeping the hall where the thermostat sits a little warmer so heating stays on longer.
It's our terribly uncivilised weather. It really shouldn't drop much below 20C but we get lots of cold and damp where if we really got cold we would build for it and be used to enjoying it. |
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Re: The energy crisis
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The only real point of concern is where the garden tap enters the mains line. It is lagged with a towel but have a jacket coming free off Severn Trent. The house is insulated and the boiler has a frost mode. I think the stat also does not go as low a zero so if the house internal temp drops to 0 (which I doubt will happen as there is always electrical devices creating heat) the boiler will kick in anyway. |
Re: The energy crisis
I have turned the heating on, 3c out there, 13c in the hall and 15c everywhere else.
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Re: The energy crisis
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Sitting here in jumper and thermal underwear trousers which is currently ok. Still contemplating getting a wired Tado thermastat to give me a little more control so I don't forget to turn it down when leaving the house like yesterday but I don't want to pay a monthly fee! |
Re: The energy crisis
Maybe my physics isn’t good enough, but when the heating comes on at 5pm, doesn’t it have to catch up to overcome the extent of cooling during the day. |
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