Not GP but... I have some doubt on Wikipedia data: I'm from Italy, living in France, and well... Italy is the ONLY (AFAIK) country in the world with a mean domestic electricity contract limited at 3kW, here it's common 36kW (12 per phase) just as a small comparison, so I highly doubt a mean Italian can consume 5MWh/year... Of course data per-se are the same Terna (the grid operator) cite, but I think they have computed something weird mixing industry and residential, because:
- in Italy only very few have electricity to heat
- A/C is still not that common
- BEVs are still not common at all
While in France electrical heating is definitively common, albeit not the sole source of heat for most.
Essentially: I think such data need much more proof on how they are collected before being trusted.
36kW is far from common in france. Heck, event 3-phase is not that common. I've never known anyone with 36kW except farmers. According to ADEME, 6kW is the most common with 70% of (I think) non-commercial subscriptions.
I'm in Alpes de Haute Provence, essentially al homes here are three-phase 36kVA to be precise witch is a little less than 36kW indeed. New homes tend to be 12kW monophase if there is no pool or EVs. Only apartments are 6-9kW.
6kW is the minimum you can get, the cheapest offer, but it's mostly a city thing. Not so small apartments are 9, old homes with new contracts vary from 9-12 mono or 36 threephase but while I have no general statistics that's still pretty common in the "countryside".
- in Italy only very few have electricity to heat
- A/C is still not that common
- BEVs are still not common at all
While in France electrical heating is definitively common, albeit not the sole source of heat for most.
Essentially: I think such data need much more proof on how they are collected before being trusted.