In central Norway, the maximum price will be NOK 3.89 per kWh, while in northern Norway it will be NOK 1.33, according to data from the Nord Pool power station.
From 1 September, the government introduced an electricity subsidy scheme that covers 90% of the price above 70 øre per kWh, calculated from the average electricity price per month for each area. If you ignore the support but include the value added tax (25%), the consumption tax (15.41 øre per kWh) and the Enova tax (1 øre per kWh), the maximum price plus the country’s high would be NOK 6.58. In northern Norway there is no VAT, and in northern Troms and Finnmark there is no consumption tax either.
One kilowatt-hour corresponds to the electricity consumption of one kilowatt-hour in one hour. A ten-minute shower consumes an average of about 4.5 kWh, but this depends on the temperature and how much water the shower head delivers.
In southeast, southwest and western Norway, the average electricity price will be NOK 3.99 per kilowatt hour (kWh). The average price per kWh on Thursday is 65.07 øre higher than on Wednesday and 2.66 kronor higher than on the same day last year, according to data from the Nord Pool power exchange. Web sites.
The lowest kWh price on Thursday will be between 3 and 4 am in Northern Norway, i.e. 72.2 øre. The price per kWh is lowest in South-Eastern, South-Western and Western Norway 2.84 NOK and in Central Norway 2.092 NOK.
On Tuesday, the maximum and minimum prices in the country were NOK 4.6 per kWh and NOK 56.9 per kWh respectively. On the same day last year, it was NOK 1.54 per kWh and 56.07 øre per kWh.