August usage was:
electric: 401 KWH
gas (hot water): 15 therms.
total bill about $75.
This is for one person, about 1,000 square feet, Oakland California area. I think the electric is high, by way of an outdoor light that's jammed permanently on. I need to get property management to replace the motion sensor one of these days, and that will bring the electricity usage down considerably. The fridge needs to be replaced; it's too big for the space it's in, the door seals are starting to go, and generally it uses enough power that a new smaller one would pay for itself in a year.
Aside from that, I'm pretty hardcore about conservation. I use a twintub washer & cold water, and line-dry my laundry (have a nice electric dryer for rare occasions), unplug all my wall-warts & other stuff when not in use, use compact fluorescent bulbs everywhere except on dimmer outlets, etc. And aside from the fridge, my biggest power user is probably my IT stack, which consists of PBX & voicemail & network router; my computers are laptops: the Mac is on almost all the time, the PC is on a couple of hours a day; no stereo, no TV (actually I do have a TV: 5" diagonal B&W, 20 years old, watch a couple of times a year...) So where the heck am I using over 10 KWH per day...?.... (The fridge is about 4 KWH/day, that outdoor light is probably two 100-watt bulbs, or 2.4 KWH/day, the router is an old PC chassis which is probably a powerhog, will replace that soon....)
Winter heating plans: Install a couple of sets of indoor curtains, floor-to-ceiling, that will block off unused areas so they don't have to be heated. Use an electric heater for spot heating e.g. the bathroom for the morning shower. Add another comforter on the bed. And put on layers and layers of long underwear all the time.
California gets a lot of its electricity from natural gas, so electric rates are probably going to soar this winter. Anyone here who's lucky enough to get their power primarily from nuclear or renewables will probably be spared the pain & itch of rate increases.