| Well, with 6.5 GW for 2.5M households, you’re at a peak around 2.6kW per home. Assuming these turbines are always at nameplate production, which they are not, they produce 6MW. Spread among 7k homes, that’s less than 1kW, which is not a lot. Given the previously stated peak of 2.6kW per household, 6MW would cover about 2300 homes. The only way you could get to this kind of number would be if you calculate the average use for a household over a year. But then you would have to compare it to the plant’s yearly production rather than its nameplate capacity. Wikipedia quotes MeyGen at 10.2GWh in 2023, that means 1.14MW on average instead of 6MW. Assuming perfect storage, that would mean an average of 163W per house for 7000 houses. That is barely enough for a fridge. > Also I would say the expression "powering a home" usually implies average demand not peak demand. That's my issue. Comparing average demand to nameplate capacity is dishonest. |
An efficient European fridge uses less than 250 kWh/a, or less than about 30W on average.
E.g. this uses 127 kWh/a: https://www.bosch-home.com/de/de/product/kuehlen-gefrieren/k...