How do I keep energy prices down?

By janurary next year the average energy bills are expected to be around £4200 a year but I’m a cynical bitch so let’s say £5000. What ways could I reduce my future bills that aren’t “not using heating” and “turning off aswell as unplugging all sockets when not in use” because I’m already doing both of those

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dontpay.uk

If you haven't signed up to do this, you've got what's coming to you.

You just gotta take the hit and not use any. Otherwise the government will cave, print more stimmies to "help" you pay for it, and that will create ever worse inflation and therefore even higher bills

welfare is cancer, buy a wood burner, and don't live in a fucking city

As far as energy goes all I need is my fridge and freezer, my cooker for about an hour a day, the washing machine once a week, showers once or twice a week and a couple hours of socket energy a day which I could easily cut down on. I just wish I could figure out how much keeping each thing on for “x amount of time at x power” costs

The most you can do is ensure your house/place is adequately shielded from the sun and that it's sealed well to allow no AC or heat leakage in warm/cool months.

Other than that buy energy efficient appliances, don't let vampire draw electronics be in standby all the time and look into solar eventually to offset costs.

That's it. It's all you can do.

Well I’m stopping all vampire draw in its tracks. I just hope i can keep it low this winter

You will freeze to death in the dark. Stop struggling and accept it.

Well I mean, I’m going to be turning off the heating and not using lights anyway.

>I just wish I could figure out how much keeping each thing on for “x amount of time at x power” costs
You look at the box/label of the device, search for a figure that tells you the amount of watts it draws (usually denoted as either W for watt or KW for kilowatt). Then you figure out how many hours it runs for, for example in a month, then you multiply the Powerdraw (watts) by the hours it runns for. You get watt-hours from that, which you divide by 1000 to get kilowatt-hours. You then multiply that figure by your electricity cost per kwh.

So say if I have a light in my sitting room that draws 50 watts. It runs 4 hours a day for a month so 120 hours. Multiply 120 hours by 50 watts I get 6,000. Divide that by 1000 I get 600 kilowatt hours I think
>You then multiply that figure by your electricity cost per kwh.
I don’t get this part. What is my electricity cost per KWH