Why low average power matters more than dramatic peak wattage?
TL;DR Q&A block
Does GEME use a lot of electricity in daily life?
The honest answer is: it uses a dynamic load, not one fixed number. Public guidance gives Terra 2 and GEME Pro reference figures, but real use changes with feed volume, moisture, ambient temperature, and how often you add scraps.
What matters more: peak wattage or average power?
Average power matters more for real ownership because it tells you how the machine behaves most of the day, while peak wattage only tells you the upper ceiling at certain moments. GEME’s public hard-parameter sheet explicitly gives both average and peak figures for that reason.
How is GEME different from a high-heat batch machine?
The official site says Terra 2 uses minimal power to maintain temperature and only ramps when new waste is detected; it is described as “not a constant heater.” That means the system is trying to maintain a living operating window, not blast heat all day.
Why can electricity use vary from one home to another?
Because this is a living process. Power demand changes with what you add, how wet it is, how much you add at once, how often you open the lid, and how cold the room is. The Terra 2 manual also states that power consumption may increase in low temperatures to maintain microbial activity.
What is the public reference for Terra 2 and GEME Pro?
The locked external parameter sheet allows Terra 2 to be stated as Average 60W / Peak 360W / Daily avg ~1.5 kWh and GEME Pro as Average 60W / Peak 500W / Daily avg ~1.85 kWh. Terra 2 is publicly positioned at 2 kg/day, while GEME Pro is publicly positioned at 5 kg/day.









