Power bills are rising — but $1 can give you a lot of value

News 22 April 2026

This opinion piece was published in the Newsroom on 1 April 2026.
View it here


Households are under pressure, but $1 of electricity still goes surprisingly far, from dozens of home coffees to heating, cooking, washing and even driving.

I’m not going to pretend that higher power bills don’t hurt. For many households, affordability is real, immediate, and stressful. When power prices rise, the impact is felt straight away, especially by those with the least room to move.

When the price of nearly everything is going up like it is now, value for money becomes very important. The distinction between affordability and value often gets lost in the debate – they are not the same thing. And when you look closely, electricity delivers extraordinary value for every dollar you spend.

My team at Electricity Networks Aotearoa created a simple graphic in response to the question: what does $1 of electricity actually get you?

$1 would get you infographic

That single dollar can power an LED light for 250 hours, keep the TV on for 50 hours, or heat your home for 1.6 hours. It can wash three and a half loads of clothes, or make you 33 coffees from your little coffee machine at home. It can run your air fryer for 1.6 hours, or cook you 167 slices of toast.

It will even get you over 1km down the road in an electric vehicle. To put that in context, driving the same distance in a typical petrol car would cost around $4. And this $4 would be based on about $2.80 per litre at the pump – a very generous assumption given current global pressures on fuel prices.

Pause for a moment and compare that to almost anything else you can buy for $1.

You won’t get far on public transport. You won’t get much data on your phone. You won’t get more than a few minutes of professional services, childcare, or healthcare. In most cities, you can’t even park for $1. A single flat white will cost you at least four times as much, but most of us have got used to that.

Electricity by its nature is invisible. At a flick of a switch, it’s always available, instantly useful, and underpins nearly every aspect of modern life. Heating, lighting, food safety, communication, transport, healthcare, education, and now decarbonisation, all depend on it. Strip electricity away, and daily life becomes almost unworkable.

All this doesn’t mean electricity prices should be stretching household budgets. It shouldn’t. Affordability matters, and targeted support for people who need it is essential.

At the same time, focusing only on price risks missing the bigger picture: electricity is one of the most productive dollars we spend as a society. Electricity isn’t just another consumer product. It’s a system, one that has to be built, maintained, upgraded, and made resilient against storms, climate impacts, and rising demand.


Tracey Kai, Chief Executive of ENA