Many state pensioners are facing a tougher winter this year after losing their £300 Winter Fuel Payment and a £300 Cost of Living payment as well as rising energy bills just in time for the colder months.
That’s why state pensioners are being urged to do whatever they can to reduce their usage and help drop their energy bills as low as they can before the winter.
Ofgem is raising energy prices by 10 percent to an average of £1,717 a year for typical usage, while high standing charges mean you pay more than £1 a day even if you don’t use any electricity or gas at all on a dual fuel house.
So it’s imperative to make sure high energy using appliances are turned off as the winter months set in.
Firstly, aircon. Air conditioning units are about the most expensive appliance to run in an entire house. Many aircon units can also be reversed into a heating mode, but they are far more expensive to run than a traditional gas boiler powered central heating system, unless you have the air con unit powered by solar panels.
Aircon can be as much as 2Kwh per hour, which means it’s using two precious units of electricity every hour. At roughly 26p a unit, In four hours, you could save about £2.08. Across a whole month that’s more than £60 off your bill.
Hot tubs are another very expensive item to run.
Many hot tubs and jacuzzis are set up so that they’re left on all year round. The idea is that heating up to temperature is the expensive part, and simply topping up that temperature is cheap, and it’s always ready to hop in at a moment’s notice.
Unfortunately, unless you’re using it several times a week and you really value that convenience, it’s still probably cheaper to turn it off and heat it up each time if you only use it a few times a year.
A hot tub can use about 2.5kwh per day to keep heated, or a crazy £150 a month, whereas heating up a hot tub may cost about £10 each time. So if you’re not using it that often, it’s cheaper not to leave it heating 24/7.
Games consoles and PCs are also power hungry.
Games consoles like PS5 and Xbox Series X use about £1.50-£2 a month in standby, sometimes more if they’re downloading a lot of updates.
Each console has various settings, such as not powering USBs and not connecting to internet when in standby, which can reduce their power usage. But nothing is cheaper than £0, which is how much they cost if turned completely off. And let’s be honest, with how fast modern games consoles and PCs start up thanks to SSD technology, you really don’t need to leave them in standby.
Garden water features are also expensive. Unless they happen to be solar powered, of course. If they’re wired to your mains, they can actually add about 30p a day or £10 a month to your energy bill. That’s £120 a year just to watch your water feature trickling.
Finally, fans can add a lot to your energy usage. In winter, it’s far more cost effective to just open a window than use a fan, which can add as much as £5 a month to your energy bill.