Quote:
Originally Posted by biker1
Nope. Take your total bill and divide by the number of kWhs you consumed and you will get approximately 14 cents per kWh. That is the real amount you are paying per kWh. The hot buck discount is not applied all the time - appears to be mostly a winter adjustment. The rate is 13.2 cents per kWh over 1000 kWhs which is hard to avoid in the summer, which is also when the hot bucks discount isn’t being applied. If you want to only deal with the incremental cost per kWh in the months with no PCA then it is effectively 13.5 cents per kWh.
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When I opened my first data center in Atlanta in 1994 I was paying 4 cents/kwh for the first megawatt and 2.1 cents for everything after that.