Submitted by kosherdog1027 t3_zea9xc in Pennsylvania
*SORRY - shouldn't have written "significantly" in the title. Didn't mean to misrepresent this based on my assumptions.*
I've seen a few local news stories mentioning how winter energy bills will be significantly higher, but it wasn't clear to me what the cause was.The price of oil heat would increase due to how much crude oil is valued, but what about electric heat customers in the Philadelphia suburbs. Isn't most of that coming from the nearby nuclear power plant? Is PECO raising the generation or transmission costs?
We lease solar panels that we had installed a few years ago (couldn't afford a purchase at the time), so we split my electric sources: one from the company I leased the panels from at 10 cents/kWh and any extra we may need from PECO at their rate. I wonder if we'll see less of an impact from this?
feudalle t1_iz58g2e wrote
I don't see the word significantly in the email. It looks like a heads up email. Hey you use electric heat, it's winter so you'll use heat and your bill will be higher than when you aren't using the heat. I don't see anything about a rate increase.