Energy consumption in your home

Typical energy consumers in the Residential sector include water heating, space heating, space cooling, appliances and lighting. The Residential sector accounts for 16.6 per cent of energy consumption in Canada.

Natural gas and electricity are the largest sources of energy for residential consumption. Depending on where you live in Canada, a portion of the electricity used may be generated by natural gas fired thermal processes, further increasing the natural gas component of the energy mix.

Costs of natural gas, heating oil and propane depend primarily on supply and demand which in turn varies with:

  • time of year
  • weather
  • location
  • transportation charges
  • provincial taxes
  • federal taxes

Electricity costs have three main components – generation, transmission and delivery. Generation involves creating the electricity, whether through hydro, thermal, nuclear or wind. Transmission involves moving the electricity from the generator to the distribution system via high-voltage transmission cables and distribution involves delivering lower voltage electricity to consumers.

In most provinces, all three components are handled by one entity, generally a provincial crown corporation such as BC Hydro or Hydro-Québec. In other provinces two or three private companies may be involved in generation or distribution but, in a regulated system, the provincial government sets prices. In a deregulated system, such as in Alberta, a number of investor-owned and municipally owned companies generate and sell electricity to a pool, allowing market forces, not government regulation, to set the price. Consumers also have a choice of service providers.

Because about 27 per cent of electricity generated in Canada is derived from fossil fuels, oil, natural gas and coal prices also impact electricity prices.

Some electricity pricing varies with the time of day.

For more detailed information on electricity in your province, use the links in the following table.

Province   Website
British Columbia, Public Utilities Commission   www.bcuc.com
Alberta, Energy and Utilities Board   www.eub.ca
Saskatchewan, SaskPower   www.saskpower.com
Manitoba, Public Utilities Board   www.pub.gov.mb.ca
Ontario, Ontario Energy Board   www.oeb.gov.on.ca
Quebec, Régie de l’énergie   www.regie-energie.qc.ca
New Brunswick, Energy and Utilities Board   www.pub.nb.ca/HomeEng.htm
Prince Edward Island, Regulatory and Appeals Board   www.irac.pe.ca/utilities
Nova Scotia, Utility Review Board   www.gov.ns.ca/snsmr/paal/ndxutil.asp
Newfoundland and Labrador, Commissioners of Public Utilities   www.pub.nf.ca
Yukon, Utilities Board   yukonutilitiesboard.yk.ca/legislation/ypua
Northwest Territories, Public Utilities Board   www.nwtpublicutilitiesboard.ca/about.htm
Nunavut, Government of Nunavut   www.gov.nu.ca/Nunavut