So this winter we have lowered our thermostats and put on sweaters and extra blankets. But the gas heating bill is higher! We lower our downstairs to 62 at night and the upstairs is 66 all night while sleeping. We could go down an extra degree or two but how is it that we're using less gas but the price is going up. Seems like last year we kept at an average 68 and it was much cheaper. Our average now is about 64.
I know about delivery charges vs supply charges and I know the supply charges have gone up - but now I'm looking into if choosing a supplier other than PSE&G will make a difference? Anyone got tips finding a new supplier or if it is worth the hassle?
A very basic search produced confusing results. They show a $/therm but they don't specify if that is inclusive of delivery and supply.
PSE&G cost breakdown
Delivery | $0.588 including balancing |
---|---|
Supply | $0.651776 |
Total | $1.239 per therm |
I see other companies offering around $1/therm - but is that just supply or both supply and delivery?
I have a few electric oil filled radiators and with the price of electricity being relatively lower, could using electric heat in our more occupied rooms and keeping the gas heat in less occupied rooms much lower be cheaper?
Danitay t1_j5pgl54 wrote
IMO you’re better off getting an energy audit and upgrading your attic insulation via air sealing top plates and blown in cellulose (high ROI) vs penny pinching gas suppliers. This was our gas energy use before and after new insulation + air sealing: https://imgur.com/gallery/Wo66HZ3
You need to keep the heat in. Also we’ve found if we lower the downstairs furnace to 68° overnight and then bump it to 70°— that burns 30 mins of gas. If we just left it to 70° all night, it would run the same runtimes as if it was 68°. We can maintain it better because of the insulation.