Archive for the ‘Cheaper Electricity’ Category
for our school science project, we have to choose an energy resource that will be cheap to pay for electricity in the short term. and give a lot of reasons saying why it would be better to choose the energy resource. options: fossil fuels, biomass, solar, wind, waves and falling water.
If you would like to save on your electric bill.
You should switch to a provider that has become the number one in savings
and it also pays your bill just by simply referring your friends and family to also save.
Just click on the link to start saving.
YOU DO NOT NEED TO PUT A DEPOSIT IN MOST CASES.
I have shared this with my friends and family and we are all saving.
Reduceenergy.joinambit.com
for our school science project, we have to choose an energy resource that will be cheap to pay for electricity in the short term. and give a lot of reasons saying why it would be better to choose the energy resource. options: fossil fuels, biomass, solar, wind, waves and falling water.
If you would like to save on your electric bill.
You should switch to a provider that has become the number one in savings
and it also pays your bill just by simply referring your friends and family to also save.
Just click on the link to start saving.
YOU DO NOT NEED TO PUT A DEPOSIT IN MOST CASES.
I have shared this with my friends and family and we are all saving.
Reduceenergy.joinambit.com
Environmental.
I think your question is far too vague for a meaningful answer. In particular, if your question concerns the economics of the two products and you want an answer that compares the two, then you need to specify quantities. For example, "Is it cheaper to produce 1GW-hr of electricity than 1 gramme of paper" would have a different answer to "Is it cheaper 1mW-hr of electricity than one million tonnes of paper". There’s no obvious single natural unit of measurement that can be applied to both to allow the comparison, unless one gets silly and uses embodied energy say. So, whereas asking whether cotton is cheaper to produce than paper might lead me to pitch an answer in terms of cost per tonne or cost per cubic metre, comparing electricity and paper needs a question that is better posed.
Do you mean your question to be more philosophical not economical, along the lines of environmental consequences or social morality?