So, when I used $500 in losses on average for people it might have been a little high regarding food. However, the loss of $250 in losses in perishable food is just for two people not for 4 or more. So, the average food losses might be more because of families with 2 children for example, which is quite common, even if only one parent is raising those 2 children. So, maybe a better average of losses of people from power outages would be 1 1/2 times $250 or $375 instead for 800,000 to 2,000,000 people's homes.
And this doesn't include business losses averaging $25,000 or more for supermarkets or delis or smaller food stores either or just businesses that couldn't even open to do business during the outages.
To the best of my ability I write about my experience of the Universe Past, Present and Future
Top 10 Posts This Month
- This is what the code looks like displayed on a page
- 158,008 visits to intuitivefred888
- Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan sees clues to the U.S. consumer in the pet food aisle
- Couple reaches agreement with daughter's biological parents after alleged IVF mix-up
- is a part of death valley below sea level?
- The Fall of the Western Roman Empire from Wikipedia
- Death Valley: one of the lowest and hottest and driest places on the planet
- Electrical Transformers
- Trump tapping Bill Pulte to lead ODNI has endangered renewal of the spy program.
- After receiving the Kalachakra Initation from the Dalai lama in Bodhgaya in December of 1985 I began writing about the King of Shambala
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment