←back to thread

301 points pseudolus | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.408s | source
Show context
p1mrx ◴[] No.45029734[source]
> it is expected to generate about 880,000 kilowatt hours of electricity each year

100 kW, in sensible units.

replies(6): >>45029865 #>>45030191 #>>45036621 #>>45036746 #>>45037007 #>>45040915 #
DavidVoid ◴[] No.45037007[source]
I don't see how kilowatts would be more sensible than kilowatt-hours here, especially since the power output might not be consistent.

See also, "Power is not Energy": https://youtu.be/OOK5xkFijPc

replies(2): >>45038065 #>>45038843 #
shiandow ◴[] No.45038843[source]
Kilowatt hour per year is a power unit, and not a particularly useful one in my opinion.
replies(1): >>45050424 #
1. bloak ◴[] No.45050424[source]
I totally agree. "kWh/year" might be what people in the industry use (some people still use British Thermal Units, in the USA ...) but for a scientifically literate lay person "about 100 kW" is far easier to understand than "about 880,000 kilowatt hours of electricity each year". (I hope I calculated that correctly.)