| demand |
The number of units of a product that can be sold at each price the entrepreneur might elect to charge. Demand is generally thought of in terms of a "schedule," a matching of prices and volumes in parallel columns. The "law of demand" postulates generally that volume is an inverse function of price--that the higher the price, the lower the volume consumers will buy. ...
Ãâó: www.compcom.co.za/thelaw/thelaw_glossary.asp
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| demand |
The amount of energy used at a specific moment in time, measured in watts, kilowatts (kW=1000 watts), megawatts (mW=1000 kilowatts, or 1 million watts). A large nuclear plant has about 1100 megawatts of capacity. A peaking plant may have only 100 megawatts of capacity. For scale, the demand of a domestic hot water heater is typically only 4 kilowatts. To confuse matters, demand is also used by economists to refer to the amount of any good or service which is procured by consumers. ...
Ãâó: www.liheap.ncat.org/iutil2.htm
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| demand |
DEMAND refers to the total amount of electricity ?measured in kilowatts ?used at any given time.
Ãâó: www.duquesnelight.com/StormCenter/UnderstandingEle...
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| demand |
refers to the quantities of a product that people are willing and able to purchase at a given price during some period of time
Ãâó: instruction.blackhawk.tec.wi.us/ghoffarth/economic...
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| demand |
The amount of energy drawn by customers at a specific time.
Ãâó: www.siliconvalleypower.com/info/
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