I live in Australia; we pay some of the most expensive utility prices in the world. Because we've been exporting most of our natural gas reserves for decades, our domestic supply has begun to face shortages, although that's only one contributor, in a myriad of factors, as to why Australian domestic NG prices have risen so much.In don't know how US gas billing works, but in Germany at least, you get billed gas on the basis of kWhs just like electricity.
That makes billing somewhat complicated since gas composition here varies slightly throughout the year and from place to place, so the gas company has to adjust accordingly.
But from there, it's pretty simple to just make the comparison.
A gas dryer uses ever so slightly more energy for the same evaporation than electric as one of the combustion products is water vapour. That reduces how much moisture the air can take.
The effect however is miniscule, so you can just assume that a gas dryer uses about the same as an electric dryer in terms of kWh's.
Once you bring heat pumps into the game, that comparison gets more complicated as COPs and specific usage and cycle patterns suddenly play a way larger role.
How bad is the the accumulation of lint through such a long run. How do you keep it clean. My distance is a little over 10 feet so unfortunately I have to buy the 20 foot, foil duct. After a year or two, I just cut it down to get rid of the far end where most lint accumulates.Quite specific to my house, but I would never own a gas dryer because of the bad venting situation I have. My laundry room is in the worst possible location: the exact center of the house. So the dryer vent has to snake its way down through the crawlspace and underneath the kitchen to reach the outside wall. It’s a bad setup (and one that I can’t do much about short of renovating the house), but at least with an electric dryer I don’t have to worry about this terrible venting situation killing me with carbon monoxide.
I’ve often thought about getting a heat pump dryer so I can be rid of dryer venting entirely. Still, my early-2000’s Whirlpool electric dryer keeps chugging along. Fun fact about my dryer: it was apparently the matching dryer for the Calypso! (My washer is a direct drive though).