Is EHU metering a good investment?

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  • ChocolateTrees
    ChocolateTrees Forum Participant Posts: 432
    edited December 2022 #272

    Based on the £63 for 73 days? That’s not really a valid sample (of 1). My own experience, in a van for 2 over 4 nights we used about 9kWh a day in June (heating, washing up, showering, fridge). At a commercial rate of 60p per. kWh, that’s more like £5.60 a day. Thats without awning heaters (which we don’t use) or electric BBQ or slow cooking or TV. I can easily imagine a family of 4 or 5 using twice that level of consumption (double the shower’s, double the washing up, double the kettle usage). Move that to autumn or winter and you have perhaps another 1/2 again. 

    The point of metering is it eliminates the guesswork for the site. 

  • young thomas
    young thomas Forum Participant Posts: 11,356
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    edited December 2022 #273

    ..but that's the rate at a commercial site in summer, not CAMC in the depths of winter...

    we all knew (presumably you included) that usage varies wildly with season, and user..

  • Unknown
    Unknown Forum Participant
    edited December 2022 #274
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  • GEandGJE
    GEandGJE Club Member Posts: 507 ✭✭✭
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    edited December 2022 #275

    Yes I do know and I was responding to you as you had used that value to "allay plenty of fears", so are you suggesting that the club has a summer pitch price deduction and a winter price deduction, or are you suggesting something different.

  • ChocolateTrees
    ChocolateTrees Forum Participant Posts: 432
    edited December 2022 #277

    Electric car charging companies are charging between 75p and 90p per kWh. When domestic electricity was 15p they charged about 30p to 40p

    If the same margin is maintained, that puts the commercial cost at 60p give or take. Call it an educated guess.

  • cyberyacht
    cyberyacht Forum Participant Posts: 10,218
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    edited December 2022 #278

    A pound a night differential, whether for HS or EHU, is neither here nor there. Any differential would need to be £5 to be worthwhile. Whether that would tie in with real world consumption I couldn't say.

  • young thomas
    young thomas Forum Participant Posts: 11,356
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    edited December 2022 #279

    Some have mentioned 40kw!? (from memory) for a winter 24hr period with most van kit on full chat.

    obviously, at the guessed figure above of 60p a unit, this would amount to nearly £15 for the electric, so that's both unsustainable as an add on (no one would take that up, would they?) and as a (non-EHU) reduction offered from the normally lower out of season price...no site is going to take £15 off a 'normally' £25-£29 a night winter pitch...as an example, Minehead is currently £29 a night.

    so, if the above usage/cost figures are roughly right, where does that leave sites and campers?

    obviously, CLs with much lower headline prices will start to look far more expensive if these sort of figures are factored in.

    Even larger sites with incl electric won't be able to maintain a lower winter pitch price with users gobbling power as above...

    So all sites (large and small) will be hamstrung between taking a hit on leccy to avoid a massive inclusive price and offering a discount for non-EHU which provides a sensible differential so that the site isnt out of pocket but campers don't feel priced out of the, usually lower, winter prices.

    campers will need to look hard at what a winter pitch offers if half the price (or more) is going to be the electric charge.

    I guess, as there isn't usually a decent chance for solar assistance in winter in the uk, that non-EHU just won't be taken up, so sites will have to construct their inclusive prices carefully over the year to remain viable.

    loading prices (even) more at peak (to balance the books) doesn't seem a good (or fair) idea, especially with far less electric used so each provider will have to look very closely at its upcoming financials.

    I imagine the market might gravitate to a situation with less sites being open in the winter as the power costs can only be recouped by high prices and campers will feel cheap off season touring is difficult to find in the uk with far fewer 'winter bargains' around.

    it might make longer stays in warmer climes more attractive out of season, where winter temperatures are a lot better and, currently, power prices are reasonable.

  • mickysf
    mickysf Forum Participant Posts: 6,474 ✭✭✭
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    edited December 2022 #280

    Totally agree with this, David. I would far rather help is given to the very needy, All I was saying was that if it suits them this government will do ‘it’. You will know like the rest of us that we have seen their action cause even more of us to become needy and miserable.

  • Rocky 2 buckets
    Rocky 2 buckets Forum Participant Posts: 7,101
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    edited December 2022 #281

    I have family members living in Eastern Spain who have energy prices ramped up by 65%+, that was early September. I guess the trek to warmer climes will need fuel for a vehicle to get there to save money on energy. . .Mmmm🤔

  • ChocolateTrees
    ChocolateTrees Forum Participant Posts: 432
    edited December 2022 #282

    YT,

    I am not sure 40kWh has been mentioned as a sensible usage? That would be a HUGE amount of electricity drawn by a single caravan or camper. Close to a constant 1.7kW for the entire 24h period. Even 24kWh would be pushing it for a “normal” user, but might be used in winter. 
    If you add an awning heater, running 24h then you might approach that, but that is discouraged by the club and many CL. Car charging could take you close to that number, but even that would be tough without risk of tripping a breaker. 

    However, 40kWh in a 24h period is possible, even on a 10a hookup. And at 60p/kWh that is £24 not £15. Completely unsustainable on a commercial pitch, as you say. 

  • young thomas
    young thomas Forum Participant Posts: 11,356
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    edited December 2022 #283

    CT, apologies for the appalling maths (let's call it a typo😉) ....I think it was PeeDee that mentioned this large number..

    either way, even say 24kwh, that would produce the £15 I was referring to, so the rest of the post, and the potential unfolding scenarios, hold true.

  • young thomas
    young thomas Forum Participant Posts: 11,356
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    edited December 2022 #284

    You're right, and that's not cheap either....but I am referring to folk who might stay a little longer than a weekend😉

    our costs are spread over 60-90 days so it doesn't (seem to) hurt quite as much.

    this autumn electric costs were €0.40 a kWh. I'll be back again this spring so it'll be interesting to check on them.

    im sure my upcoming contract has €0.40 in it.

  • Rocky 2 buckets
    Rocky 2 buckets Forum Participant Posts: 7,101
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    edited December 2022 #285

    We have an accord👍🏻😊

  • mickysf
    mickysf Forum Participant Posts: 6,474 ✭✭✭
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    edited December 2022 #286

    I’m finding some figures claimed by ‘campers’ astonishing. Our total energy kWh usage over 24hrs at home is on average 14 units (summer) 22 (winters). 
    Some must have saunas and jacuzzis running in their awnings!

  • Hja
    Hja Club Member Posts: 852 ✭✭
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    edited December 2022 #287

    Is that total energy or just electricity? Our winter domestic electricity is much higher than that, but we are totally electric, including heating and the car.

  • mickysf
    mickysf Forum Participant Posts: 6,474 ✭✭✭
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    edited December 2022 #288

    As said, total energy. That’s everything, no gas, or oil, or slid fuel, or solar panels, only electricity! 
    Not charging the car though.

  • Unknown
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    edited December 2022 #289
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  • mickysf
    mickysf Forum Participant Posts: 6,474 ✭✭✭
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    edited December 2022 #290

    There really is a serious problem if some campers are using those figures quoted. They must be the ‘I’ve paid for it’, I’m keeping my pets warm, awning 24/7 toasty, don’t care brigade’. 

    Those requests on the back of the toilet doors I read on the last site I was on clearly aren’t working with some. We are clearly paying for their selfishness and may well continue to do so. So what’s to do about them?

  • ChocolateTrees
    ChocolateTrees Forum Participant Posts: 432
    edited December 2022 #291

    Totally agree!

    My take on this is the 1st step in being able to make a change is knowledge. Awareness of what one is using is the only way to make a decision to continue or cut down. It’s the reason that smart meters with on home displays work. You can see very easily what is being used and take action to cut down if needed. Meters on pitches offer this functionality. A nice big notice at Check-In with the cost for an “average” stay in £ and kWh for a couple and/or a family of 4 in summer and winter, gives a target for folk to aim at. 
    knowlege is power (pun intended) (I’ll get my coat)

  • mickysf
    mickysf Forum Participant Posts: 6,474 ✭✭✭
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    edited December 2022 #292

    Hang on, before you get that coat, it may help keep you warm but seriously that nice big notice will be ignored by those selfish users. Thing is, any future pricing plan will be based on historic data and they, the heavy consumers, will be included in this. We will therefore continue to pay for their contributions to the data. Now some may say they are in the minority and peanuts in the grand scheme of things but every bit does help we must continue to believe. It seems to me that a network wide installation of metered pitches is very much for the future and way down the line. Too late possibly for many of us and certainly of no help in the current energy crisis. May be better right now to replace all those breakers to deliver far less amps. Happy trips ahead!

  • ChocolateTrees
    ChocolateTrees Forum Participant Posts: 432
    edited December 2022 #293

    Mickysf,

    the point is, by then you are on a meter an paying for what you use at the going rate. The notices just give you an indication of what you might use, and therefore what it might cost. If heating the awning is your thing, the so be it, but prepare to pay for it. 

    But yes - it’s a future plan. Any rollout will take time.

  • mickysf
    mickysf Forum Participant Posts: 6,474 ✭✭✭
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    edited December 2022 #294

    Totally understand and agree, CTs. My point is that we will continue to pay for those that excessively use. Unfortunately it’s the likes of the ‘you’ thing that we careful users are currently subsidising. That can’t be right.

    Unfortunately there are some that say they will not reduce usage until others do, I’m not one of them either. That roll out is way, way in the future me thinks!

  • JVB66
    JVB66 Forum Participant Posts: 22,892
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    edited December 2022 #295

    As I have posted when we were at FM last the member with the very up market car and caravan outfit next to our very old PVC was  saying that if this club introduces metering to pitches he will not be using this  club sites again

     

  • mickysf
    mickysf Forum Participant Posts: 6,474 ✭✭✭
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    edited December 2022 #296

    Shocked, I wonder why?😉

    May be it’s the likes of him we are subsidising?

  • JVB66
    JVB66 Forum Participant Posts: 22,892
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    edited December 2022 #297

    He would not elaborate, undecided but you are probably on the right trackwink

  • mickysf
    mickysf Forum Participant Posts: 6,474 ✭✭✭
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    edited December 2022 #299

    Agree Husky but there are those that take your biscuit, mine and many others too. The fact is at present we all pay the same regardless of how community minded we may be in attempting to achieve what you suggest. Is that the correct way/fair way? That restaurant will have costed the ingredients based not on the greedy wants of a few!

  • Navigateur
    Navigateur Club Member Posts: 3,880 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited December 2022 #300

    if this club introduces metering to pitches he will not be using this club sites again

    That seems like a double bonus of reducing energy usage and increasing available pitches.

  • ChocolateTrees
    ChocolateTrees Forum Participant Posts: 432
    edited December 2022 #301

    IMHO, the answer is as much as you like, metered and  paid for at the going rate. 
    I imagine I am more or less average for electric use for a couple in a van, but want the option to be a very heavy user on the occasion I want to charge the car. I want to pay for that privilege at the going rate too.