At the end of a 31 day month, your utility bill shows that you have?
Sorry that people are poking fun at you for mixing power and energy. Pretty sure you are just wanting the daily energy consumption. And as others have pointed out that is 2000 kWh / 31. Not sure why you needed to post that question here as the answer seems to me to be trivial, but I digress. Now, if you are looking for power, as in steady state power usage, then you will have to take 2000/(31*24) as in the number of kWh divided by the number of hours in the time period. That gives you 2688 watts of steady state load or regularly repeating periodic loads. Which is accurate for things like telecom shelters and parking lots, but terribly un-useful for a home because the loads are coming and going all the time. So there are the two answers that could be what you were looking for. Hope this helped.