In south-east Norway the price will be 46.5 øre per kWh at its highest, in central Norway it will be 3.9 øre, in northern Norway it will be 9.2 øre, and in western Norway it will be 35.4 øre, shows numbers from hvakosterstrommen.no.
If you ignore the electricity subsidy, but include value added tax (25 per cent), consumption tax (16.44 øre per kWh) and tax to Enova (1 øre per kWh), the country’s highest maximum price would be 96.4 øre. In Northern Norway, there is no VAT on electricity for households, and in Finnmark and Northern Troms, households and public administration also do not have to pay the consumption tax.
One kilowatt hour corresponds to electricity consumption of one kilowatt over one hour. A ten-minute shower uses an average of around 4.5 kWh, but this depends on the temperature and how much water the shower head delivers.
The lowest kWh price on Tuesday will be between 6 and 7 in the morning in central Norway, then at -0.1 øre. The price per kWh is at its lowest in South-East Norway 34.6 øre, South-West Norway 48.6 øre, Northern Norway 2.6 øre and Western Norway 22.7 øre.
On Sunday, the maximum and minimum price in the country were respectively NOK 1.72 per kWh and -0.4 øre per kWh. On the same day last year, it was 82.03 øre per kWh and 13.7 øre per kWh.
The electricity subsidy covers 90 per cent of the price above 73 øre, hour by hour.
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