One thousand cubic feet of gas (Mcf) -> 1.027 million BTU = 1.083 billion J = 301 kWh by Lyon
50
There is no simple conversion because there are different gases used for heating and each has its own conversion rate.
Divide the dollars per kWh by 3,412.14163
If you mean dollars PER mwh and cents PER kwh, divide by 10.
one cubic feet = 1028 Btu
See the article taken from www.world-nuclear.org linked below
1hp = 746 watts, so 2hp would be 1492 watts, or almost 1.5 kw kWh does not convert to hp, as kWh has a time component.
A watt is a J/s. So a kWh is 1000 (J * hr)/s. Since there are 3600 seconds in an hour: 1 kWh = 3,600,000 J. There are 4.18 J per calorie, so: 1 kWh = 861,000 cal 665 kWh = 573,000,000 cal
Divide the kWh by 1 million
Multiply the gas units (imperial) by 100, then divide by three. This will give you how many kilo watts an hour. If you want a more accurate answers, multiply the gas units by 31.6. For metric metres (cubic meteres) multiply by 11.06 to get KWH
good question A KWH is 1000 watts of power used for one hour. A 100 watt bulb would need to be on for 10 hours to use 1 KWH.
In 2011, according to the EIA, Texas was about average (11.6 cents/kWh vs the national average of 11.54 cents/kWh): Electricity prices in Texas are particularly sensitive to the price of natural gas, since that's a primary fuel source for generation. As natural gas prices have been fairly low this year, electricity prices have been similarly reasonable as well.