Daily Energy Cost Graph for Cottage

Last week I posted a graph of the Cottage daily electric use. This graph is updated every day. While the graph is very useful, it does not include any propane used. While there are many days that the cottage does not use propane, I do expect to use propane for heat this winter. And there were some days in November when propane was used to heat the cottage.

As I suggested earlier, propane and electric use can be included on a single graph of daily energy cost. Electric energy costs me $0.30/kWh in Maine and propane costs $4.29/gal. (I should point out that propane cost would be significantly lower if I used much more propane. My local supplier is currently charging $3.30 per gallon delivered for customers with 1000 gal annual use. So far my use is at the 100-200 gal/year level.)

This month (December) I am using propane heat much more in order to actually compare my propane flow numbers with the amount of propane that is delivered. I received a propane delivery about a week ago, so my goal is to use a significant amount of propane in the next few weeks so that I can use the next propane delivery to calibrate my propane flow meter.

I have performed a preliminary calibration of the propane flow meter — and that calibration is being used to produce the propane costs in the above graph. But I do expect to adjust these figures once I receive the next propane delivery.

Recall from my earlier post that, under conditions that my heat pump had a heating COP = 3.3, propane heat cost was about 2.2X the cost of heat from my heat pumps. So it is with great reluctance that I turn off the heat pumps and heat with propane. Such is the cost of scientific experiments.

Leave a comment