International comparisons are always full of pitfalls and faulty assumptions such as differences in the cost of living but just for the exercise:-
I filled up with petrol (Gas) today at $AU1.94 per litre, and that was the cheapest by about 30c per litre that my Fuel Price App could find in my local area. Converting from litres to US gallons and at todays currency exchange rate that is $US5.20 per gallon.
Our electricity bill is quarterly not monthly and the bill covering June will not arrive until August but the monthly average for the March-May quarter (with solar power operating) was about 370kWh which cost us $AU141.75 or $US95.42 (at todays exchange rate) - but that period is mostly Autumn (Fall) here whereas June is Summer in the US.
My electric bill runs about the same as Jon's all year regardless of the season. We looked into solar power but due to our location and the number of trees it's not doable. We have our own trees but that's nothing compared to what's across the street from us and on the hill above us. Due to the trees and location, we receive about 3 to 4 hours max of sun during the summer time and an hour or two more during the winter.
We have minimal air-con, meaning I have one for the room I sit in with my computer and I use one in the room with my piano and I only use one at a time. I wouldn't have either air conditioners, but due to health issues, I can't get overheated because I can no longer regulate my body temperature due to autonomic nervous system issues. I physically become ill and have passed out from the heat.
Overall, where I live in New England, about 66% or more of the residents do not have air conditioning. We've never needed it until now. During normal circumstances, we used to get about 3 weeks total of putridly hot and humid weather during the summer with temps in the 30s C and humidity in the 70% and higher range just as we're experiencing right now.
With such a short duration, we would suck it up and deal with the few days of heat and humidity knowing full well that a cold front, referred to as a Montreal Express, will come rushing in from Quebec or the Great Lakes and break the hot and humid spell. After the front passed by, the temps would drop sometimes 10 or 20 degrees and we would be cool and dry for a week or more until the next bout of heat comes in. Most of the time too, the heat and humidity didn't show up until late August and then it all went away anyway by mid-September. Today, we see this pattern starting in late May or early to mid-June making for a very long hot summer. With temps like this and my sensitivity to the heat, I can no longer do anything in my gardens or yard.
Due to the times, we no longer see big cold fronts and instead see a weak cool air mass float in without rain which is blocked by a heat dome caused by Boston which is 55 km south of me. This drops the temps a bit over a few days but then everything warms up again without a real break from the heat.
My gasoline (petrol) prices run $3.69 USD or higher per gallon or about 98-cents a liter if my math is right, and is among the highest in the region just because.