condition5
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Dean
- Joined
- Dec 28, 2024
- Threads
- 30
- Messages
- 135
- Reaction score
- 182
- Location
- Mid Atlantic
- Vehicles
- 2024 Mach-E (Premium)
- Thread starter
- #1
Background:
Because I'm overly fond of spreadsheets, I've tracked my home electric use (in an all-electric house) for years. BGE is our service provider, and while we have options from other suppliers (if I have the terminology correct), I've not noticed dramatic savings between the available vendors.
I took a deep dive into BGE rates as part of our L2 charger install (and a failed effort to capture some of Maryland's EVSE rebate funds...but that's another story). I instantly regretted this as I looked at multiple layers of cost (energy, supply, delivery, franchise, transmission, taxes, fees) layered on ...sometimes in layers as thin as thousands of cent! And of course there are variations by seasons...and maybe time of day. And BGE does not make this information especially easy to find or digest.
So, I simplified everything into what I call my gross energy cost (using my total KWH and total BGE bill) as the two factors. If my math is right, I'm paying about $0.19 per kWh (about 12 cents of this energy, the rest is...all the other thin layers).
How's BGE (or your non BGE-provider) treating you?
Because I'm overly fond of spreadsheets, I've tracked my home electric use (in an all-electric house) for years. BGE is our service provider, and while we have options from other suppliers (if I have the terminology correct), I've not noticed dramatic savings between the available vendors.
I took a deep dive into BGE rates as part of our L2 charger install (and a failed effort to capture some of Maryland's EVSE rebate funds...but that's another story). I instantly regretted this as I looked at multiple layers of cost (energy, supply, delivery, franchise, transmission, taxes, fees) layered on ...sometimes in layers as thin as thousands of cent! And of course there are variations by seasons...and maybe time of day. And BGE does not make this information especially easy to find or digest.
So, I simplified everything into what I call my gross energy cost (using my total KWH and total BGE bill) as the two factors. If my math is right, I'm paying about $0.19 per kWh (about 12 cents of this energy, the rest is...all the other thin layers).
How's BGE (or your non BGE-provider) treating you?
Sponsored
Last edited: