Joules/hour to Megawatt

J/h

1 J/h

MW

0.00000000027777777778 MW

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Quick Reference Table (Joules/hour to Megawatt)

Joules/hour (J/h)Megawatt (MW)
3,6000.000001
36,0000.00001000000000000001
360,0000.00010000000000000008
3,600,0000.0010000000000000008
10,000,0000.00277777777777778
36,000,0000.010000000000000008

About Joules/hour (J/h)

Joules per hour (J/h) is a very low power unit, equivalent to approximately 0.000278 watts. It is used in precision calorimetry, passive building heat loss calculations, and biological heat flux measurements where the energy exchange over hours is more meaningful than per-second rates. One watt equals 3,600 J/h. The unit is occasionally seen in nutrition science and environmental physiology, where energy budgets are tracked over hours.

A sleeping mouse dissipates roughly 720,000 J/h (~200 W/kg) due to its high surface-area-to-volume ratio. A well-insulated house loses about 36,000,000 J/h (10 kW) on a cold winter day.

About Megawatt (MW)

A megawatt (MW) equals one million watts and is the standard unit for power station output, large industrial facilities, and grid-scale renewable energy. A single onshore wind turbine generates 2–5 MW at full capacity. A large gas peaker plant might output 100–500 MW. Data centers consume tens to hundreds of megawatts. Utility-scale solar and battery storage projects are sized in megawatts.

A 2 MW wind turbine at 40% capacity factor produces about 700 MWh per month. A large hospital might draw 10–30 MW of electrical power continuously.


Joules/hour – Frequently Asked Questions

When you're tracking energy budgets over hours — passive house heat loss, slow battery self-discharge, biological calorimetry — expressing rates in J/h matches the timescale of your measurements. A passive house losing 36 MJ/h is more intuitive to a building physicist than "10 kW" because they're calculating daily heat budgets in megajoules. It's a unit of convenience, not necessity.

One kWh = 3,600,000 J, so 3,600,000 J/h = 1 kW. The relationship is elegantly circular: if you consume 3.6 MJ/h of power, you use exactly 1 kWh of energy each hour. This makes J/h a natural bridge unit between the SI energy world (joules) and the practical electricity billing world (kWh). Multiply J/h by hours and you get joules of total energy; divide by 3,600,000 and you get kWh.

A Passivhaus-certified building targets heat loss below 54 MJ/h (15 W/m² × 1,000 m² for a typical house). A standard older home might lose 180–360 MJ/h (50–100 kW) on a cold day. The difference is dramatic: triple glazing, 300mm insulation, and air-tightness can reduce heat loss by 80%. Building energy certificates in some countries express this in kWh/m²/year, but the underlying calculation uses J/h or W.

About 230,000–290,000 J/h (65–80 W). This drops from your waking basal rate of ~290,000–360,000 J/h (80–100 W) because metabolic rate falls 10–15% during sleep. The heat warms your bed and room measurably — two people sleeping together can raise bedroom temperature by 1–2°C overnight in a small, well-insulated room. It's why you wake up warm even without the heating on.

Not directly — most building codes use watts per square meter (W/m²) or kWh/m²/year for energy performance ratings. However, the underlying heat transfer calculations in standards like ISO 13790 effectively compute in J/h when assessing hourly energy balances. Some German and Swiss engineering tools output intermediate results in kJ/h or MJ/h. The unit lives in the calculation layer, even if the final certificate uses more familiar units.

Megawatt – Frequently Asked Questions

In the US, roughly 750–1,000 homes (average consumption ~1.2 kW per home). In Europe, where usage is lower, 1 MW can serve 1,500–2,000 homes. But this is average — on a hot summer afternoon when everyone cranks AC, that number can drop to 300–400 homes. Grid planners must size for peak demand, not averages, which is why installed capacity far exceeds average load.

A small data center uses 1–5 MW; a large hyperscale facility (Google, AWS, Microsoft) draws 50–200 MW — some exceeding 300 MW. The entire US data center industry consumed about 17 GW in 2023, roughly 4% of national electricity. AI training clusters are pushing demand higher: a single large GPU cluster can draw 50–100 MW, and planned AI-focused campuses target 1 GW or more.

Onshore turbines typically rate 2–6 MW; the latest offshore monsters reach 14–16 MW per turbine. Vestas' V236-15.0 MW turbine has a rotor diameter of 236 meters — wider than two football fields. A single sweep of its blades can generate enough electricity for a UK household for two days. Capacity factors run 25–45% onshore and 40–55% offshore, so actual average output is roughly half the nameplate rating.

Most operating reactors produce 500–1,400 MW of electrical power. The world's largest, at France's Gravelines plant, has six reactors totalling 5,460 MW. Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) being developed target 50–300 MW each. Nuclear plants run at 85–95% capacity factor — far higher than wind (~35%) or solar (~25%) — meaning a 1,000 MW reactor actually delivers about 900 MW on average.

MW tells you the maximum instantaneous power the battery can deliver (how fast it can discharge), while MWh tells you total stored energy (how long it can sustain that output). A 100 MW / 400 MWh battery can deliver 100 MW for 4 hours, or 50 MW for 8 hours. Grid operators care about both: MW for handling sudden demand spikes, MWh for sustained backup during extended outages or evening solar fade.

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