Sorry for the very late reply:
Lok said:
Power loss 256W (not a lot), Monthly power consumption 1735.764 W.
Monthly should be in kWh, and those numbers don't jive. If you slipped a decimal and meant 173.6 kWh, that would be close.
Is electricity your sole source of heat? You're right, that isn't a lot, even for an apartment, with only a small outside wall exposure. I use about 450 kWh per month, and that only includes the fan that drives the heater, not the heat itself! I have a 150 sq m townhouse, with one shared wall. I live near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, with an average winter temperature of about 0C.
It was winter so the wall is hotter than outside ambient, and my walls are completely uninsulated brick with a shot of concrete.
Ahh, that's starting to make some sense, for the temperature you are seeing. Yes, for uninsulated walls, the wall temperature can be above ambient. In an "ideal" case of very thin and absolutely no insulating value, the wall temperature would be exactly halfway between the inside and outside temperature. The better the insulation, the closer you get to the ideal, where the surface temperature is exactly equal to the air temperature (inside and outside).
An uninsulated concrete wall has an insulation value of about 0.176 k*m^2/W (US: R-1). In my area, codes require 2.3 (US: R-13) for new houses.
Now, given the size of the wall and temperature, the heat loss should be about 6300 W. So your numbers on required heating don't make any sense at all. You sure you aren't getting your heat for free?
I really doubt that you can sense a 3 Kelvin night-sky temperature considering we have 10 tonnes of atmosphere above us much hotter than space. When pointing at a clear sky it was colder than usual but only by a few degrees (remembrance).
Probably true -- and the atmosphere, even when dry, does absorb at least a little IR. Still, if radiation is the primary heat loss, it causes surfaces/objects to be colder than ambient, not warmer.