The same as it consumes in a year, or in a decade. Please note that "kilowatt" is a unit of power, NOT a unit of energy.
1.1 kW-hours
These units do not have a direct relationship. Imagine kilowatt hours as the equivalent of work done, and megawatts (or kilowatts) as the equivalent of effort.To answer your question: 1 megawatt 'produces' 1000 kilowatts per hour.
There is no such thing as a "kilowatt per hour". Kilowatt is a unit of power, not of energy. A unit of energy is kilowatt-hour. That's kilowatt times hours, not "per" hour ("per" implies division, not multiplication). If a generator produces 10 kilowatts, that means it produces 10 kilowatt-hours every hour.
Convert the watts to kilowatts, and the days to hours. Then multiply kilowatts x hours to get kWh.
It depends what the power rating of the appliance is. A 500 watt microwave will use half a kilowatt if it's run for an hour on full power. A 750 watt unit will use 3/4 of a unit in the same time period.
1.1 kW-hours
5.5 watts is 0.0055 kilowatts. in one hour the equipment uses 0.0055 kilowatt-hours.
2
5
Every hour a 1 Megawatt turbine would produce 1,000,000 watts. That would be the equivalent of 1,000 Kilowatts.
An air conditioner uses a certain number of kilowatts all the time. If it runs for 1 hour it uses that number of kilowatt-hours of energy, and that is what you pay for. If it is run for 2 hours it costs twice as much. 2.5 HP corresponds to 1.865 kilowatts theoretically, but a 2.5 HP machine might use up to twice that depending on its mechanical and electrical efficiency.
The Battersea power stations A & B were both decommissioned with A being taken offline in 1975 and B taking offline in 1983. Therefore, the number of kilowatts an hour they produce is zero.
To change kilowatts to watts multiply by 1000.2400 kilowatts=2400,000 watts or 2,400,000 watts.If you meant how many kilowatts in 2400 wattsthen this is 2.4 kilowatts
Varies dependent on brand and model. For a specific one, go to the website for the manufacturer.
Thsi depends on the light bulb specification. For example if you buy a standard 60W light bulb from your supmarket then this will consume 0.06kilowatts. Its simple just divide the wattage stated on the light bulb by 1000 to give you the kilowatts
About 50,000 to 65,000 Gallons
A 400-watt light uses energy at the rate of 0.4 kilowatt. In 1 hour, it uses 0.4 kilowatt-hour of energy.