Original Answer:
we culd not rate power that depends on loads we r using in our houses.
Updated Answer:
The vast majority of homes in the U.S. have 100-amp or 200-amp service at 240 volts, which is 24 kilowatts to 48 KW of load. 80% of that is 19.2 KW and 38.4 KW for a properly rated home. However, most homes use far less than that throughout the day and only approach those values during peak load times such as doing laundry while running the air conditioning, doing the dishes, vacuuming, watching TV in each room, using the electric stove, and having all of the lights turned on at the same time; generally not a situation that most home owners will face.
Depends on what house it is, whether you use air conditioning and put up Christmas lights, there are just too many variables for that vague of a question.
Depends on how big the house is.
9 megawatts a year
1 megawatt = 1,000,000 watts1 kilowatt = 1,000 wattsSo 544 million kilowatts is 524,000,000,000 watts. In megawatts this is 524,000 MW. Or 524 gigawatts (GW)
1.2 million homes
The megawatt-hour is unit of energy. The megawatt is unit of power. So, conversion is impossible.Let me know 5793.553 megawatts-hour (assume E) were obtained over what period of time in hours (assume T), then the average value for the megawatts (assume P) is:P = E / T
The component of current is missing so question can not be answered. W = A x V.
250 Megawatts = 250,000,000 Watts.
60 Gigawatts equals 60000 megawatts
435000 megawatts.
9 megawatts a year
Nothing.
12000 megawatts
10,000,000 watts
1 megawatt = 1,000,000 watts1 kilowatt = 1,000 wattsSo 544 million kilowatts is 524,000,000,000 watts. In megawatts this is 524,000 MW. Or 524 gigawatts (GW)
4 megawatts = 4,000,000 (4 million) watts Mega means Million.
The worlds largest wind turbine creates seven-plus megawatts per year.
mega = 1 million, 1 megawatts is 1,000,000 watts
There are one million (1,000,000) watts in a megawatt.