Alabama is 2021’s fifth most energy-expensive state
PROTECTED CONTENT
If you’re a current subscriber, log in below. If you would like to subscribe, please click the subscribe tab above.
Username and Password Help
Please enter your email and we will send your username and password to you.
Alabama is 2021’s fifth most energy-expensive state
Special to the News
With residential electricity use projected to increase by 2.8% this year, the personal-finance website WalletHub on Wednesday released its report on 2021’s Most and Least Energy-Expensive States, as well as accompanying videos and expert commentary.
For a better understanding of Americans’ energy costs relative to their location and consumption habits, WalletHub compared the average monthly energy bills in each of the 50 states and the District of Columbia using a special formula that accounts for the following residential energy types: electricity, natural gas, motor fuel, and home heating oil.
Regarding energy consumption and costs in Alabama, where one equals the most expensive and 25 is average, Alabama ranks second in electricity consumption per consumer and fifth in the price of natural gas.
The state also ranks eighth in motor-fuel consumption per driver and twenty-third in the price of electricity. This reflects that the state ranks high on the expensive side in four categories and a little higher than average in one category.
Additionally, the average monthly energy bill in Alabama is $371. For the full report visit https://wallethub.com/edu/energy-costs-by-state/4833.
As part of its report, WalletHub also provides the following expert commentary to help consumers:
What are some good tips for saving money on energy bills?
“Space heating and cooling usually account for almost half of home energy use. Therefore, focusing on turning your thermostat down in the winter and up in the summer when you are not home, or sleeping is a great way to reduce your bills. Investments in attic and wall insulation can also be great ways to save money, particularly if you have an older home.” – Erica Myers, assistant professor, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
“Think in terms of conserve, improve, invest. Conserve by using choices and behaviors to save money. This is the classic “turn off the lights” option…Improve by upgrading the performance of your energy consumption…Participate in efficiency incentives that produce longer-run savings in energy by improving lighting, insulation, and appliances. Finally, invest in playing a whole new role in the energy system by changing from a consumer to a prosumer (producer and consumer) by building your own capacities to produce and even sell energy. Rooftop solar and other distributed forms of energy generation can work with the grid, home energy storage, and electric vehicles to make you a player rather than just a price-taker in the energy system.” – Mark Alan Hughes, Ph.D., professor, University of Pennsylvania
What makes energy costs higher in some states than in others?
“Many factors affect the energy prices in a given state. For electricity, these factors include state and local taxes, state energy and environmental policies, market regulation and design, the generation mix across fuel types, and access to generation fuels.” – Harrison Fell, senior research scholar, Columbia University
“One of the most important drivers of electricity prices is the local cost of generation. For example, prices tend to be lowest in places where a lot of inexpensive hydro is available and higher in areas that depend more on fossil fuel generation. Differences in electricity prices across regions can also be driven by local policies such as: 1) funding energy efficiency initiatives, 2) renewable generation requirements, or 3) past investments in the distribution network.” – Erica Myers, assistant professor, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Are tax deductions and credits effective at incentivizing households to be more energy efficient?
“Yes, but they are often insufficient. Just because energy efficiency improvements can be self-financing does not mean they are self-implementing. Confusion, complexity, and time-consuming choices can be enough to derail energy efficiency opportunities. More affluent households can feel like their time is literally too valuable to spend on saving money and less affluent households can literally not afford the time it takes to save money. Designing ways to bundle, automate (e.g., opt-out rather than opt-in), wholesale (e.g., building code requirements) energy efficiency at the systems level is much more reliable and probably necessary to get the full value to society energy efficiency.” – Mark Alan Hughes, Ph.D., professor, University of Pennsylvania
“The uptake of energy efficiency programs offered by many utilities is notoriously low. Improving those incentives for energy efficiency likely helps, but energy consumption, particularly in electricity and heat, often faces a saliency problem. That is, most consumers are unaware of how much they pay per unit for electricity and how much any given appliance uses, so it is very difficult for consumers to calculate potential savings from energy efficiency upgrades.” – Harrison Fell, senior research scholar, Columbia University