Gas, Electricity
If you are renting a property, it is your responsibility to settle the
utility bills directly. Many of the specialist letting agencies include the
charges in the rental or service agreement.
Denmark, like most other European countries, has 220-volt AC, 50Hz current
and uses two-pin continental plugs. Adaptors are readily available at airports
should you need them. Visitors from the UK will need an adaptor for electric
appliances, whereas North Americans need a transformer in order to use their
110/125V appliances.
Copenhagen Energy is the biggest energy provider in Copenhagen. Environment
–friendly energy options are popular and the norm.
Water
Nearly all Danish drinking water derives
from groundwater. The Danish water supply is highly decentralized, with large
and small waterworks situated all over the country.
A connection fee is charged when the consumer is connected to the water supply. In 2001, the total
connection fee of a normal city one-family house was DKK 12,191 DKK. Apart
from the connection fee and water bill, a green tax is charged on water
consumption. The consumer normally receives one
overall bill for drinking water, wastewater, green taxes and VAT. The payment
system on both drinking water and wastewater is based on a break-even
principle, which in short means that the incomes cover the expenses. Therefore
the water prices vary a lot from one supplier to another.
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